Embanked enclosure, Ballyhussa, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ringforts
There is something quietly unsettling about a site that exists more convincingly on paper than it does on the ground. At Ballyhussa in County Waterford, a circular embanked enclosure roughly 35 to 40 metres in external diameter sits in open pasture on a gentle south-facing slope, and yet a visitor standing in that field would see nothing at all. No earthwork, no rim of raised ground, no suggestion that anything lies underfoot. The enclosure has effectively vanished at ground level, surviving only as a cartographic memory.
The site was recorded on the first edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, published in 1840, which means surveyors walking the land in the 1830s could still make out enough of a feature to commit it to paper. Embanked enclosures of this kind are broadly understood as enclosed spaces defined by an earthen bank, sometimes with an accompanying ditch, and in an Irish context they are frequently associated with early medieval settlement or agricultural use, though without excavation it is rarely possible to say more than that. Whatever the bank at Ballyhussa once looked like, the intervening century and a half of pasture farming has reduced it to nothing visible. The 1840 map becomes, in effect, the last reliable witness to its existence.
