Field system, Irishtown, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Ritual/Ceremonial
Near Irishtown in County Kildare, a set of ancient boundaries lies completely invisible at ground level, detectable only from the air and only under the right conditions. What the soil conceals is a field system, a network of linear fosses, shallow ditches dug to divide and define agricultural land, whose outlines have long since been filled in and built over by centuries of farming. The only reason we know they are there at all is a phenomenon called a cropmark, which occurs when buried features cause the vegetation above them to grow differently, either more vigorously over silted-up ditches that retain moisture, or more weakly over compacted foundations. Seen from above, particularly during a dry summer when the contrast sharpens, those differences in growth trace the ghost of a landscape.
An aerial photograph, catalogued as GB96.GD.08, captured exactly this kind of spectral evidence above Irishtown. What it revealed was not merely a set of straight boundary lines but something more complex: the fosses of the field system appear to be associated with a curvilinear enclosure, meaning the boundaries curve and loop rather than following a purely rectilinear grid. Curvilinear enclosures of this type are commonly associated with early medieval settlement in Ireland, where a farmstead or small community would establish a roughly circular or oval boundary around a dwelling and its immediate working land, with field divisions radiating outward. The combination of a curved enclosure and organised field divisions suggests this was once a coherent, planned agricultural landscape, the infrastructure of a community that has otherwise left no visible trace above ground.