Enclosure, Lissadober, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Enclosures
There is something quietly unsettling about a place that exists only from the air.
At Lissadober in County Tipperary, an oval enclosure roughly 35 to 40 metres across lies beneath ordinary pasture, invisible to anyone standing in the field. No earthwork rises above the grass, no stone breaks the surface. Walk the ground and you would have no reason to suspect anything was there at all.
The enclosure came to light in 1973, when an aerial photograph captured the faint trace of its outline against the surrounding land. Aerial photography has long been one of the primary tools for detecting buried or levelled features in the Irish landscape; variations in soil moisture, crop growth, or grass colour can reveal the ghost of a ditch or bank that has otherwise vanished entirely. The Lissadober site sits on fairly level ground in gently undulating terrain, which complicates matters further, since the field itself contains natural undulations that could easily mask or mimic the shape of a buried feature. What the enclosure was originally, whether a ringfort of the early medieval period, an earlier ceremonial site, or something else again, is not known from the available evidence. The oval form and the approximate dimensions place it within a broad family of enclosed sites found across Ireland, but without excavation, its date and function remain open questions.
