Enclosure, Crinagort, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Enclosures
In a hollow somewhere in the Kerry landscape at Crinagort, a small circle of drystone walling sits within an ancient field system, quietly resisting easy explanation.
The enclosure is modest in scale, roughly ten to eleven metres across, and the wall that defines it is only partially standing, reaching about 0.8 metres in height where it survives. What makes it worth pausing over is not its grandeur but its precision of purpose: somebody, at some point, chose this particular sheltered dip in the ground, gathered loose stone, and built a boundary here.
The structure is roughly circular, defined by a wall around half a metre thick, built in the drystone tradition, meaning no mortar, just carefully or sometimes roughly placed stone relying on weight and friction to hold. A narrow entrance, just 0.5 metres wide, opens to the southeast. Enclosures of this kind in Kerry can be difficult to date without excavation; they appear across a broad span of Irish prehistory and the early medieval period, sometimes serving as animal pens, sometimes as boundaries around a dwelling, sometimes with purposes that remain genuinely unclear. The fact that this one sits within a wider field system suggests it was part of a working agricultural landscape rather than an isolated monument, though what relationship it had to the other elements of that system is not recorded.