Enclosure, Kilcolman, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the pasture above Kilcolman, in County Mayo, there is a place that exists only on paper.
No earthwork, no shadow in the grass, no slight depression after rain; nothing at ground level gives any indication that something was once here. And yet a circular enclosure appears, marked with apparent confidence, on an estate map drawn in 1811.
The map in question is held in the National Library of Ireland as manuscript 2713, an estate survey dating to that year. Circular enclosures of this kind were a common feature of the Irish landscape, typically the remains of a ringfort or rath, a farmstead enclosed by an earthen bank and ditch that might date anywhere from the early medieval period through to the later centuries. Thousands survive across the country, many still faintly visible as low earthworks in agricultural land. What makes the Kilcolman example unusual is its subsequent disappearance from the record. When the Ordnance Survey began mapping Ireland in the nineteenth century at the six-inch scale, producing a series of maps that became the standard reference for landscape features of all kinds, the enclosure was not recorded. Not on the first edition, not on any revision. Whether it had already been levelled by the time the surveyors arrived, or whether it was simply missed, is impossible to say.
What remains is a cartographic ghost: a feature documented once, by an unknown hand working for an unknown estate, and never corroborated again. The rising ground it once occupied is now ordinary pasture.