Enclosure, Morgans South, Co. Limerick

Co. Limerick |

Enclosures

Enclosure, Morgans South, Co. Limerick

In a flat stretch of County Limerick pasture, a rubble-stone boundary encloses a roughly rectangular plot that measures about 26.

5 metres north to south and 21 metres east to west. From above, it reads as little more than a field boundary, the sort of thing you might pass without a second glance. But step inside and the ground begins to tell a different story, one written in subtle changes of level rather than in standing stones or dramatic earthworks.

An enclosure of this kind, a defined area set apart by a constructed boundary, is a common enough feature in the Irish landscape, but the internal details here are what make the site worth attention. Along the northern side, just inside the boundary, a scarped edge, essentially a deliberate cut into the ground creating an artificial slope, rises to a height of just over a metre and runs about four metres wide, its face directed inward toward the enclosure's centre. A second, shallower scarped edge runs along the western interior, roughly 0.4 metres high and 3.5 metres wide, this one oriented toward the boundary rather than away from it. The combination of these two differently oriented scarps suggests the interior was intentionally shaped, though for what purpose, settlement, enclosure of livestock, or something more ceremonial, the record does not say. A gap of approximately four metres in the boundary at the north-east corner may represent an original entrance. The site was recorded by Denis Power and uploaded to the Archaeological Survey of Ireland in August 2011, with aerial photography taken in March 2006 providing additional documentation.

The enclosure sits in low-lying level pasture, which means the ground underfoot can be soft depending on the season; late summer or early autumn tends to offer the driest conditions for walking the interior. The scarped edges are subtle features and are best appreciated by moving slowly around the inside perimeter rather than crossing straight through the centre. The gap at the north-east corner is the clearest single feature to look for on approach, effectively marking what would once have been the threshold of the space.

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Pete F
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