Enclosure, Commons, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
Enclosures
There is nothing to see here, and that, in a sense, is precisely the point.
Somewhere in a low-lying stretch of rough pasture in Commons, County Dublin, lies the trace of an enclosure roughly sixty metres in diameter, a circular boundary that once defined some portion of the landscape, whether as a settlement, a field system, or something older still. It has left no ridge, no ditch, no scatter of stone that a walker might stumble across and wonder about.
The site was identified not by excavation or fieldwork but by aerial photography, a method that has quietly transformed Irish archaeology since the mid-twentieth century. Cropmarks and soil parchmarks, visible only from altitude and often only in dry summers, can reveal the ghostly outlines of features long since levelled by ploughing, drainage, or simply time. It was Paddy Healy who first noted this particular enclosure in 1974, picking it out from the air and placing it on record. The site was later compiled by Geraldine Stout, whose work has helped document many such fragile, invisible entries in the archaeological register. Without that aerial observation, the enclosure would remain entirely unknown.
Because there are no visible surface remains, there is little to direct a visitor towards a specific spot. The surrounding area is rough pasture, the kind of ground that discourages casual exploration and offers no obvious focal point. What this site rewards is not a visit in the conventional sense but an awareness of how much of the Irish landscape holds records that are legible only from above, or through the patience of those who spend their careers cross-referencing photographs with maps. If you do pass through the Commons area, the most useful thing to bring is not a guidebook but a consciousness that the ordinary-looking field in front of you may once have enclosed something entirely unordinary, and that the absence of visible evidence is not the same as the absence of history.
