Field system, Knockhouse, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
What survives at Knockhouse in County Waterford is not a monument in any conventional sense, but the ghost of a working landscape. A network of field ditches, invisible at ground level for centuries, was first detected in aerial photography before excavation in 2015 brought it properly into focus. The occasion for that excavation was not scholarly curiosity but the rezoning of the land for industrial development, which meant archaeologists had a narrow window in which to record what lay beneath fields that had been under tillage on a gently north-facing slope.
The dig, carried out by Walsh and Ficner in 2015, uncovered a system of linear ditches radiating outward from an associated ringfort, the kind of enclosed circular settlement that was the standard unit of rural life in early medieval Ireland, typically housing a single family and its livestock within an earthen bank and outer ditch known as a fosse. At Knockhouse, two of the field ditches extended directly from the outermost fosse of that ringfort, one running south and another heading north for roughly 45 metres before turning south-west for a further 60 metres or so. A third ditch, approximately 60 metres long, ran roughly east to west within the excavated area. Small gaps of around 1.5 metres appear at intervals in these ditches, most likely the original entranceways between enclosures. The geometry of the whole system suggests it was laid out in a deliberate and organised way, not accumulated piecemeal, and the excavators concluded that these ditches were contemporary with the ringfort itself, placing the field system firmly in the early medieval period.
What makes Knockhouse quietly significant is the rarity of such evidence. Ringforts are common across Ireland, numbering in the tens of thousands, but the agricultural landscape that once surrounded them is almost never preserved or examined in this kind of detail. Here, the accident of development, and the legal requirement to excavate ahead of it, preserved a snapshot of how one early medieval farming community divided and managed the land immediately around their home.