Embanked enclosure, Duagh, Co. Waterford

Co. Waterford |

Ringforts

Embanked enclosure, Duagh, Co. Waterford

There is something quietly unsettling about an archaeological feature that exists in the historical record but refuses to show itself on the ground. At Duagh in County Waterford, a small embanked enclosure, roughly thirty metres in external diameter, sits in pasture at the base of a south-facing slope where the land gives way to marsh. Walk across the field and you would see nothing out of the ordinary; the enclosure is simply not visible at ground level.

What we know of it comes from the 1840 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, one of the most ambitious cartographic undertakings in nineteenth-century Ireland, which recorded landscape features with a precision that has since allowed archaeologists to identify sites that later land use has effectively swallowed. An embanked enclosure of this kind, a roughly circular area defined by a raised earthen bank, is a common enough monument type in the Irish countryside, associated variously with settlement, ritual, or agricultural use depending on period and context. Here, though, the combination of its low-lying position at a marsh edge and its total invisibility at surface level makes it a peculiar case. Whether the bank has been levelled by ploughing or simply subsided into the soft ground over time is not recorded.

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Pete F
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