Enclosure, Ballysheen, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
In the townland of Ballysheen in County Kerry, there is a recorded enclosure, a monument significant enough to have been catalogued and assigned its own place in the national inventory of archaeological sites, yet one that currently sits in a kind of official silence, its details not yet made publicly available.
That gap is itself quietly telling. Ireland has thousands of enclosures, the general term for a defined area bounded by a bank, ditch, wall, or combination of these, and they range from early medieval farmsteads to ceremonial or defensive sites spanning millennia. The fact that something at Ballysheen warranted formal recognition speaks to its presence on the landscape, even if the specifics of its form, date, and condition remain, for now, out of reach.
Ballysheen lies in Kerry, a county whose archaeology is dense and varied, shaped by thousands of years of settlement across its peninsulas, uplands, and coastal margins. Enclosures of various kinds are a recurring feature of the Irish countryside, many of them earthworks that survive as low, grass-covered banks, easily overlooked by anyone who does not know to look. Others are defined by stone, particularly in the west of Ireland where building material was always close at hand. Without the underlying record being available, it is not possible to say which type this is, how large it might be, or what period it belongs to. What can be said is that its classification as an enclosure places it within one of the broadest and most enduring categories of Irish field monuments.