Enclosure, Bramblestown, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Enclosures
At ground level, there is nothing obvious to see.
Walk the fields at Bramblestown in County Kilkenny and you would have no particular reason to pause. But viewed from the air, in the right conditions, the land gives something away: a large circular enclosure, roughly 65 metres in diameter, betrayed only by the way crops grow differently over buried features below the soil. These cropmarks, the differential ripening or stress patterns in grain that reveal hidden archaeology beneath, showed up clearly in aerial photographs taken in August 1996, and that is essentially the only way this site has ever declared itself.
The enclosure itself is ancient, though its precise date and purpose remain unspecified. Circular enclosures of this kind are common enough across Ireland, and they range from prehistoric settlements to early medieval ringforts, the latter being the enclosed farmsteads that dot the Irish countryside in their thousands. What complicates the picture at Bramblestown is the layering of later activity across the site. A denuded field boundary, one that had already been reduced to near-nothing by the time the first edition six-inch Ordnance Survey map was produced in 1840, runs roughly north to south through the western part of the monument. A more recent field boundary cuts across the eastern edge entirely, truncating the circle where it once would have closed. The enclosure has, in other words, been quietly dismantled over centuries, not through any single act of clearance but through the ordinary, incremental logic of agricultural land use, each generation drawing new lines across older ones.