Enclosure, Kilbeg, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Enclosures
On a south-facing slope in County Galway, a rough rectangle of ground holds the faint outline of something that was already fading when the first Ordnance Survey mapmakers passed through in 1838.
They recorded it clearly enough, a rectangular enclosure measuring roughly 38 metres on its longer axis, and inked it onto their six-inch map. Nearly two centuries later, the enclosure survives more as suggestion than structure.
What remains today is fragmentary but legible to a patient eye. Along the southern side, a short earthen bank, just over fifteen metres long and less than half a metre high on its outer face, is the most tangible surviving element. To the north, a degraded scarp still carries a line of trees, and beyond that an irregular band of nettles may trace the course of a fosse, the external ditch that would originally have reinforced the boundary. Elsewhere, modern field banks have quietly absorbed the enclosure's perimeter, folding it into the working agricultural landscape. The landowner's word for it is simply a fort, the colloquial Irish term for a ringfort or enclosed settlement, though the rectangular plan here is less typical than the circular form most commonly associated with early medieval farmsteads. Rectangular enclosures of this kind are less well understood, and their dates and functions remain harder to pin down without excavation.
The nettles along the northern edge are worth noting as a practical signal. Dense nettle growth in Irish fields often marks disturbed or nitrogen-rich ground, the kind left by collapsed earthworks or buried occupation layers, and their presence here lends some weight to the idea that the fosse line has not entirely vanished, just retreated below the surface.
