Ring-ditch, Ring, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In a low-lying field in County Wexford, something circular and ancient lies just below the surface, invisible to anyone walking the ground but legible from the air.
A ring-ditch, roughly 25 metres in diameter, reveals itself only as a cropmark, the kind of faint discolouration in ripening grain that marks where a filled-in ditch once cut through the subsoil. The ditch itself, a fosse, ran as a single continuous loop approximately 3 metres wide, encircling what was most likely a burial or ritual monument from prehistoric times.
Ring-ditches of this type are the eroded remnants of round barrows or similar funerary enclosures, the ditch having once defined the boundary of a mounded burial site. Over centuries of ploughing and weathering, the mound disappears, but the ditch fill, with its slightly different soil composition, retains enough distinction to show up as differential crop growth when viewed from above. What makes this particular site quietly notable is that it does not stand alone. Immediately to its north lies a second, conjoined ring-ditch, the two features sitting together on the flat Wexford landscape like overlapping circles on a diagram, suggesting this area may have functioned as a small cluster of monuments rather than a single isolated burial place.