Enclosure, Grange, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Enclosures
Between the first Ordnance Survey of 1839 and the revised maps of 1900, a roughly circular enclosure in the townland of Grange, Co. Kilkenny, was quietly erased from the landscape.
The earthwork, which measured approximately 53 metres in diameter, simply ceased to appear on official mapping, suggesting it had been levelled during the intervening decades as the surrounding land was brought under the plough. Yet the ground remembers what the maps no longer show.
The enclosure survives as a cropmark, the kind of ghostly imprint that becomes legible only from the air during dry summers, when buried features cause differential growth in overlying crops. On satellite imagery captured in July 2018, the site resolves into something quite clear: a wide, deep fosse, the encircling ditch that would originally have defined the boundary of the site, running to about 5 metres in width. A gap of similar width on the eastern side likely marks an original entrance. Even in 1839, the enclosure was not entirely intact; a north-south field boundary was already cutting through it, truncating its western edge, and that same boundary remains in place today. A second enclosure of comparable type lies roughly 120 metres to the south-west, hinting that this corner of Kilkenny once held a concentration of such features, possibly the remains of early medieval farmsteads or enclosures associated with agricultural or domestic settlement. Enclosures of this general type, circular or subcircular ditched areas typically associated with the early medieval period in Ireland, are among the most common archaeological features in the Irish countryside, though most are now known only through aerial evidence rather than any visible surface remains.