Embanked enclosure, Rathanny, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Enclosures
On a north-south ridge at Rathanny in County Waterford, a grass-covered oval of ground holds its shape with quiet persistence. It does not announce itself as anything dramatic, yet the low bank encircling it, stone-faced and earthen, speaks to deliberate human effort at some point in the distant past. The outer diameter runs to roughly 45 metres, though the enclosed area itself measures somewhat less, around 33 metres on its longest axis, suggesting the bank has always been a substantial feature relative to the space it defines.
The enclosure was recorded on the Ordnance Survey's six-inch map of 1840, which means it was already a legible, bounded feature in the landscape by the time the first systematic cartographic survey of Ireland was carried out. An embanked enclosure of this general type, a roughly circular area defined by a raised earthen or stone boundary, is a form that appears across Ireland from the early medieval period onward, though without excavation it is rarely possible to assign a precise date or function to any individual example. The bank here is stone-faced, between two and three metres wide, rising about a metre on the interior and up to one and a half metres on the exterior at its highest point. On the scarp side, where the natural slope of the ridge does some of the enclosing work, the constructed element becomes less pronounced. That combination of built bank and natural topography is itself telling; whoever made this enclosure was reading the ridge carefully.
