Enclosure, Lahernathee, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Enclosures
In a pasture field on a north-west-facing slope in Lahernathee, County Cork, a small circular earthwork sits quietly above the surrounding ground, its entrance still marked by two upright stone slabs standing just over a metre apart.
The whole structure is now smothered in ferns and briars, which in one sense conceals it and in another draws attention to it; vegetation tends to colonise raised ground, and from a distance the dense growth marks the enclosure's outline almost as clearly as the bank itself.
The enclosure is roughly circular, measuring about 9.6 metres north to south and 8 metres east to west, and it sits raised approximately 0.6 metres above the level of the surrounding pasture. The defining feature is a low bank of earth and stone, still surviving to an internal height of between 0.1 and 0.3 metres, with a width of around 1 metre. Along the southern arc of the bank, a slab and several stones protrude from the outer face. The western entrance, framed by those two upright slabs set 1.1 metres apart, gives the site a sense of deliberate construction rather than natural formation. Small enclosures of this kind, sometimes called ring enclosures or minor earthwork enclosures, appear throughout County Cork and the wider Irish countryside; they may have served as homestead enclosures, stock enclosures, or ritual spaces, though without excavation it is rarely possible to assign a precise function or date to any individual example. The site overlooks a valley to the north, a positioning that may have been practical, ceremonial, or simply incidental to whatever landscape was being farmed or occupied at the time of its construction.
