Embanked enclosure, Ballylegat, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Enclosures
On a south-facing slope in Ballylegat, County Waterford, there is a patch of ground that looks, at first glance, like nothing more than a grassy field bounded by low banks. Look a little more carefully, though, and the geometry becomes telling: the remnants of a D-shaped embanked enclosure, a form of earthwork that recurs across the Irish landscape and almost certainly predates the hedged and walled field patterns that have long since grown up around it.
The enclosure was already partially obscured by the time the Ordnance Survey recorded it at six-inch scale in 1840. By then, a field bank running northeast to southwest had cut across the eastern side, truncating what had once been a more complete D-shaped outline measuring roughly 40 metres north to south and 30 metres east to west. What survives today is smaller and subtly different in shape: the existing field banks, around three metres wide and one metre high and retaining traces of stone-facing on their eastern and southwestern sides, define a sub-triangular grass-covered area approximately 25 metres by 23 metres. An internal scarp running northwest to northeast adds another layer of complexity, suggesting that the earthwork has been modified or that its original form was more elaborate than what now meets the eye. A separate earthwork lies roughly 50 metres to the south, hinting that this part of Ballylegat may once have held a cluster of related features rather than an isolated monument.
Embanked enclosures of this kind are thought in many cases to be early medieval in origin, possibly serving as farmsteads, stock enclosures, or ancillary features associated with nearby settlement, though without excavation the purpose and date of any individual example remain open questions. The stone-facing preserved in sections of the Ballylegat banks is a detail worth noting; it suggests a degree of construction effort that goes beyond a simple thrown-up earthen boundary.
