Embanked enclosure, Ballymulalla, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ringforts
Near the top of a north-facing slope in Ballymulalla, County Waterford, a circular earthwork sits quietly beneath layers of overgrowth, its outline still legible to anyone who knows what to look for. The enclosure measures roughly thirty metres across and is defined by an earthen bank standing about one and a half metres high. At the south-west, faint traces survive of a fosse and an outer bank, the fosse being the external ditch that would originally have accompanied the bank, adding both a physical and perhaps a symbolic boundary to whatever activity the enclosure once contained.
Embanked enclosures of this kind are found across Ireland and can date from prehistory through to the early medieval period. Some functioned as settlement sites, others as enclosures for livestock, ritual purposes, or a combination of uses that shifted over centuries. Without excavation it is rarely possible to say precisely what a given example was for, and Ballymulalla offers no obvious clues from the surface alone. What it does offer is the essential shape of the thing: a circle imposed on a hillside, deliberately built, its bank still holding its form after what may be well over a thousand years.