Enclosure, Barn Demesne, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Enclosures
Some sites exist only as photographs of shadows.
On a south-east-facing slope in the undulating farmland of Barn Demesne in County Tipperary, there is an enclosure that cannot be seen from the ground at all. No earthwork, no stone, no depression in the soil gives it away. Its entire existence, as far as the current record goes, rests on a single aerial photograph taken in July 1970.
The photograph, part of the Cambridge University Collection of Aerial Photography, captured two roughly circular cropmarks and a third linear feature in the tilled field below. Cropmarks form when buried features, walls, ditches, or pits alter the way moisture is retained in the soil above them, causing the crops growing there to ripen at slightly different rates or reach different heights. From the ground, nothing registers. From the air, particularly in dry summers when soil moisture differences are most pronounced, the outlines of long-vanished structures can suddenly resolve into clarity. The circular forms recorded at Barn Demesne are consistent with the kind of enclosed settlement that was common in early medieval Ireland, though the aerial photograph alone cannot confirm a date or precise function. The linear feature alongside them adds a further layer of ambiguity, suggesting a boundary, a field system, or some other arrangement that no longer survives in any form above the surface.
The site has since been tilled over, and there is nothing visible to a walker crossing the field today. What makes it worth knowing about is precisely that absence: the landscape here looks entirely ordinary, and yet underneath, or at least within the memory of the soil, there are the faint impressions of something organised and deliberate, noticed once from several hundred feet up, and otherwise unremarked.