Enclosure, Ballycullane, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Enclosures
Most ancient enclosures announce themselves to the visitor through earthworks, stonework, or at least a noticeable rise in the ground. The one at Ballycullane in County Kildare does none of these things. It exists, for most practical purposes, only as a cropmark, a ghostly imprint readable not from the ground but from the air, where variations in how crops grow over buried features can betray the outline of structures that disappeared from the surface long ago.
A single aerial photograph, reference GB89.AI.11, captured what the ground conceals: a circular enclosure defined by two very narrow, closely spaced fosses, which are essentially ditches cut into the earth, running in parallel around the perimeter. Attached to the north is a rectangular annexe, a secondary enclosed space that suggests the site had some functional complexity, perhaps separating activities or livestock, or providing a sheltered approach. More striking still is the wider context visible in the photograph: the enclosure sits within a rectilinear field system, its geometry mapped out by linear fosses forming a grid of sorts around the central feature. Field systems of this kind are frequently associated with prehistoric or early medieval land use in Ireland, though without excavation it is difficult to assign a precise date. The double-fosse arrangement around the circular enclosure is a detail worth noting; double enclosures tend to indicate a site of some significance, whether as a defended farmstead, a ceremonial space, or a place of local authority.
Because the site survives only as a subsurface cropmark with no visible surface features, there is little for a visitor to observe on foot. Its value lies in what it tells us about the layered history of this part of Kildare, a landscape that continues to hold its past below the plough line, waiting for the right angle of light and the right season of growth to make it briefly visible again.
