Enclosure, Newtown, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Enclosures
Somewhere beneath the tarmac of the M7 motorway south of Limerick city, an archaeological site continues into the ground, unexcavated and unresolved.
This is not unusual in Irish road archaeology, but it gives the site at Newtown a particular quality: what was uncovered is only part of the story, and the rest was sealed beneath the new road before anyone could read it fully. What did emerge during the dig was a layered picture of human activity spanning thousands of years, compressed into a relatively small area of County Limerick farmland.
The site first came to attention during test trenching in 2000, carried out under licence as part of the Limerick Southern Ring-Road Project. That initial phase, led by Hayes, turned up surface finds that immediately signalled a long history of use: Bronze Age funerary pottery, the kind associated with cremation burial practices from roughly 2000 BCE onwards, and a fragment of a glass armlet dating to the Early Christian period, somewhere in the first millennium CE. Full excavation followed in 2001, directed by Frank Coyne. What he uncovered was a sub-rectangular enclosure, a type of enclosed settlement defined by a boundary ditch, common in early medieval Ireland and often associated with farming communities or minor ecclesiastical sites. At Newtown, the enclosure was defined by an L-shaped ditch running along its north and west sides, measuring roughly 15.5 metres north to south and 27.3 metres east to west, and descending to a depth of 1.32 metres. Within and around it, excavators identified two hut sites, a cremation pit, and a cluster of additional features. A second enclosure lay just 25 metres to the east. The eastern side of the main enclosure had been disturbed by machine activity and an existing field boundary, and the southern extent simply disappeared beneath the projected road line, leaving the structure incomplete in the record.
The site itself is no longer visible at ground level; the road construction that prompted the excavation also effectively buried or destroyed what remained. For anyone interested in the wider landscape, the excavation reports are accessible through the excavations.ie database, where Coyne's 2001 findings are catalogued in detail. The broader Newtown townland, like much of the Limerick hinterland, rewards attention to the layers of history compressed into ordinary-looking fields, even when the most revealing evidence now lies either underground or in archive.