Ring-ditch, Hazelbrook, Co. Dublin

Co. Dublin |

Ritual/Ceremonial

Ring-ditch, Hazelbrook, Co. Dublin

There is nothing to see at Hazelbrook.

That is, nothing visible to anyone standing in the field, looking across the low east-west rise that lifts almost imperceptibly above the surrounding landscape in County Dublin. The archaeology here exists only as a ghost, disclosed not by any mound or earthwork but by the differential growth of crops above buried features, captured in an aerial photograph and noted in the Sites and Monuments Record.

What the photograph reveals is a possible circular ring-ditch, a type of monument that typically consists of a circular or near-circular ditch, sometimes enclosing a burial or marking a ceremonial boundary, and which dates most commonly to the Bronze Age or earlier. Ring-ditches are frequently all that survives of a former burial mound once the mound itself has been ploughed flat over centuries of agriculture. At Hazelbrook, the feature appears as a crop mark, the kind of faint tonal difference in a field of grain that becomes legible only from the air and under the right conditions of drought or uneven soil moisture. The record was compiled by Paul Walsh and subsequently updated by Christine Baker, drawing on observations from Dr Steve Davis. Notably, this is not an isolated feature: a second possible ring-ditch lies immediately to the south in the same field, and a further enclosure sits roughly one hundred metres to the north, suggesting that what appears to be ordinary agricultural land may overlie a cluster of related prehistoric activity.

For anyone visiting the area, there are no upstanding remains and no interpretive signage; the site is, in practical terms, invisible at ground level. The aerial photograph held in the national record is the closest most people will get to seeing what is there. The best conditions for observing crop marks of this kind, should you happen to be in a light aircraft, are during a prolonged dry summer spell, when buried ditches retain moisture and the crops above them grow taller or greener than the surrounding vegetation. What is worth appreciating, even without seeing anything at all, is the quiet accumulation implied by three separate features within a single field on an unremarkable gentle rise, each one a faint signature of lives and practices that predate any written record of this part of Dublin.

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