Enclosure, Drom Na Coille, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
In the forested ground around Drom Na Coille, on the Iveragh Peninsula in County Kerry, a circular mound or enclosure is marked on the second edition of the Ordnance Survey map.
Whether it survives beneath the tree cover, or has been absorbed entirely into the landscape, nobody can say with certainty. Archaeologists who went looking for it could not find it.
The site belongs to a broader category of earthwork enclosures common across Ireland, typically interpreted as the remains of ringforts or related early medieval settlement features, circular in plan and defined by a bank or raised edge. The Iveragh Peninsula contains a remarkable density of such monuments, many of them documented in the 1996 Cork University Press archaeological survey compiled by A. O'Sullivan and J. Sheehan. This particular entry, catalogued as number 809 in that survey, is one of the more elusive ones. Its existence rests on cartographic evidence alone, a mark on a nineteenth-century map, with the ground itself now too densely forested to confirm or contradict what the mapmakers recorded. There is something quietly unsettling about an archaeological site that is known only through its absence, present on paper and invisible in the field.