Designed landscape - tree-ring, Kilbride, Co. Carlow
Co. Carlow |
Designed Landscapes
On the 1839 Ordnance Survey six-inch map of County Carlow, a small circle of trees is marked at Kilbride, the kind of deliberate planting that signals an estate landscape rather than a wild or accidental growth.
These tree-rings were a fashionable feature of designed demesnes in eighteenth and nineteenth century Ireland, planted in circular formations to ornament parkland, screen outbuildings, or simply to impose a sense of geometric order on the countryside. They appear with quiet regularity on early Ordnance Survey maps, little flourishes that hint at households with the means and inclination to shape their surroundings according to the aesthetic conventions of the period.
What makes the Kilbride example quietly melancholy is how completely it has since disappeared. Where the map records a tidy ring of trees, there is now nothing visible at ground level. The planting itself is gone, along with whatever house or garden it once complemented. The 1839 survey captures a moment of apparent order and intention, a landscape that someone cared enough about to cultivate, and the contrast between that cartographic evidence and the current emptiness is more eloquent than any ruin. Many designed landscapes survived the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in at least partial form, with overgrown walls or surviving specimen trees offering some trace of what had been. This one left only its outline on a sheet of paper.
