Embanked enclosure, Cummeen, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ringforts
On the lower slopes of Croughaun Hill in County Waterford, a circle of raised earth sits quietly in the overgrowth, its purpose uncertain and its entrance invisible. That last detail is the thing that catches the attention: an enclosure with no apparent way in or out, at least none that survives above ground. The earthen bank that defines it runs in a rough circle roughly twenty-five metres across, and what makes it stranger still is that additional spoil has been piled against the outside of the bank along its western to southern arc, as though someone wanted the outer face to appear more substantial than the interior would suggest.
The structure is what archaeologists call an embanked enclosure, a broad category that covers a range of circular or oval earthworks defined by a low bank, sometimes accompanied by a fosse, the shallow external ditch that would have been dug when the bank was first thrown up. Here, traces of a fosse survive at the north-east. The bank itself is modest: about 3.2 metres wide at its south-western stretch, rising only half a metre on the inside and between 0.6 and 0.8 metres on the outside. These are not defensive dimensions. Such enclosures in Ireland are variously interpreted as ringforts used for farming and settlement, as ceremonial or ritual spaces, or as enclosures whose original function has simply been lost to time. The addition of spoil to the outer face complicates any easy reading of this one. The site sits on a gentle south-facing slope at the foothills, a position that would have offered reasonable shelter and some solar aspect, the kind of practical consideration that tends to appear again and again at early medieval and prehistoric sites throughout the Irish countryside.