Ecclesiastical enclosure, Clogheen, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Ecclesiastical Sites
A site that has effectively vanished from the ground whilst remaining perfectly legible from the air says something quietly remarkable about how the Irish landscape holds its past. At Clogheen in County Kildare, a large circular enclosure, roughly 120 metres in diameter, was captured in a 1971 aerial photograph as a faint cropmark, the kind of ghostly outline that appears when buried ditches or earthworks cause overlying crops or grass to grow differently. The feature in question appears to be a fosse, a defensive or boundary ditch, tracing a wide circle across the upper western end of a pasture ridge, positioned just above the flood plain where the Black River bends around the site from north through west to south.
Cropmarks of this type are often the only surviving evidence of early ecclesiastical enclosures, the circular or near-circular boundaries that once defined monastic or church settlements across early medieval Ireland. What makes the Clogheen site particularly suggestive is the presence, at the centre of that circle, of both a church site and a graveyard. The combination of a large circular boundary ditch with a church and burial ground at its core follows a pattern well recognised in Irish ecclesiastical archaeology, pointing towards an early Christian settlement of some significance on this bend of the Black River, itself a tributary of the Barrow. When the site was visited in 1986, no trace of the enclosure was visible at ground level, and subsequent visits confirmed the same. The fosse, if it survives at all, lies entirely beneath the pasture surface, readable only by the faint differential it once imposed on growing vegetation, caught in that single aerial pass over fifty years ago.