Enclosure, Doire Mhór Thoir, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
Some sites earn their place in the historical record not by what they contain but by what they conspicuously lack.
At a location in Doire Mhór Thoir, a townland in County Kerry, an enclosure was formally recorded and subsequently investigated in the field. The conclusion was unambiguous: there is no surface trace of an enclosure here, nor anywhere in the surrounding area. The site exists, in other words, as a kind of bureaucratic ghost, a place that was believed to be something and turned out, on inspection, to be nothing visible at all.
Enclosures, as a category of monument, cover a wide range of prehistoric and early medieval forms, from simple ringforts used as enclosed farmsteads to ceremonial or funerary boundaries. Their traces are often subtle, surviving as low earthen banks or slight depressions that can be read in raking light or from aerial photographs but are invisible at ground level. In this case, even that much is absent. Whatever led to the original record, whether a misreading of aerial imagery, a misidentified field boundary, or an earthwork that has since been completely ploughed or eroded away, the field inspection found nothing to confirm it. Kerry's landscape holds a remarkable density of genuine early medieval and prehistoric remains, which makes the occasional phantom entry in the record a small but curious counterpoint to the broader pattern.