Enclosure, Ardgeeha, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Enclosures
On a south-facing slope just below the crest of a flat-topped hill in County Tipperary, there is an earthwork that the land above it has largely swallowed.
The farmer who works this ground has no tradition of a fort in the field, no local name for it, no memory passed down of anything unusual lying beneath the grass. And yet it is there.
The enclosure at Ardgeeha came to light not through excavation or local knowledge but through the air. An aerial photograph taken in 1970 and catalogued as CUCAP BDR 64 captured two roughly circular concentric cropmarks, each sitting inside the other, with a combined diameter of around thirty metres. Cropmarks form when buried features such as filled-in ditches affect how vegetation grows above them, producing tell-tale variations in colour and height that are invisible at ground level but legible from above. What the photograph revealed was a bivallate enclosure, meaning one defined by two circuits of ditch or bank rather than one. This double-ringed form is associated in Ireland with enclosed settlements of the early medieval period, though without excavation the date here remains uncertain. The only physical trace now visible on the ground is a faint rise in the field surface, perceptible where the land begins to fall away towards the western boundary.
What makes this place quietly striking is less what it is than how it was found, and how thoroughly it has been forgotten. Hundreds of similar enclosures survive across the Irish midlands and south, many of them known locally as raths or fairy forts, carrying accumulated layers of folklore and avoidance. This one carries nothing. No name, no story, no prohibition against ploughing. Its existence depends entirely on one photograph, one overcast morning in 1970, and whatever angle of light made the crop tell its secret.