Enclosure, Rathkenny, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Enclosures
On a west-facing slope in County Tipperary, a small oval depression in improved pasture marks what was once a deliberately enclosed space, its original purpose long since absorbed into the working rhythms of agricultural land.
What catches the eye, if you know what you are looking at, is the way the ground folds: a levelled bank reduced to a low scarp, and a shallow ditch, or fosse, curving around the perimeter. These are the compressed remains of a feature that once stood with considerably more presence.
The enclosure measures roughly 20 metres east to west and 16 metres north to south. The bank survives to a width of about 5.4 metres and a height of only 0.6 metres, the fosse beside it reaching nearly 13 metres across overall, though just 2 metres at its base and no more than 0.6 metres deep. These are modest figures now, but they represent centuries of gradual erosion and agricultural levelling. The site does not stand alone: a second enclosure adjoins it directly to the north, and the two share their fosse along the arc running from north-west through north to north-east, which suggests they were either planned together or developed in close relation to one another. A third enclosure lies approximately 100 metres to the north-west. Such clustering is not unusual in the Irish midlands and south, where enclosures of this kind, typically understood as the remains of early medieval farmsteads, sometimes appear in loose groupings that hint at small communities or successive generations of settlement on the same ground. A modern field boundary cuts across the eastern sector of the fosse, a reminder that the landscape has been continuously reorganised around these older features without ever quite erasing them.
