Enclosure, Ballystrahan, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Enclosures
There is nothing to see at Ballystrahan, and that is precisely the point.
A large circular enclosure lies beneath an ordinary open field in County Dublin, invisible to anyone walking across it, detectable only from the air, where it appears as a crop mark, a ghostly outline pressed into the earth that shows up in aerial photographs as the soil and vegetation above it respond differently to dry or wet conditions than the ground around them.
Crop marks of this kind form when buried features, ditches, walls, or banks alter the depth and moisture of soil above them, causing the crops or grass growing overhead to ripen, yellow, or grow taller at slightly different rates. The result, seen from altitude, is a faint but legible signature of something that once stood. In this case, the record held in the Sites and Monuments Register for Dublin, reference DU011-125, notes not only the circular enclosure itself but additional features nearby that may represent an associated field system, suggesting the site was once part of a more extensive organised landscape. The information was drawn from the SMR file and from a communication with T. Condit. Circular enclosures of this type are generally understood to be ringforts, the most common class of early medieval monument in Ireland, typically dating from roughly the sixth to the twelfth century and used as enclosed farmsteads. The record was compiled by David O'Connor and updated by Christine Baker.
The field sits in open ground that rises gently from the roadway, giving it an unremarkable appearance that would give no hint of what lies below. There are no visible remains at ground level, no earthworks, no stones, no obvious depression or ridge. A visitor coming here should be prepared to find nothing in the conventional sense. The interest lies in the idea of the place rather than any physical feature: that beneath a quietly sloping field, the outline of an early medieval enclosure persists, waiting for the right season and the right angle of sunlight to make itself briefly known.