Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Our Ancestors in Cabragh 2


Last week we noted that there were more as many as ten historical sites mapped in the area enclosed by the Cabragh wetlands in the elbow of the River Suir. Most of these sites were ringforts, where families lived for centuries in relative safety, sheltering in the protection given by the marsh and river on their east, north and west sides.

These circular ring forts were used by pastoral Celtic people. Most of them are thought to have been built between 500AD and 1000AD, but it seems likely that some of the sites were occupied many centuries before. In places the ringforts are barely a hundred metres apart, suggesting that expanding families necessitated the building of new homesteads close by, which would have been another source of protection and tells us something about the cooperation between family groups.

For centuries then humans lived with the wetlands, adapting themselves to the natural rhythms and cycles of the local environment, growing crops, grazing cattle and moving livestock to seasonal pastures.

The rectangular enclosures or moated sites were built by the Anglo-Normans, probably dating from the late 13th century. They are mainly defensive sites with a wide fosse (ditch) or moat on the outside. This was often filled with water. Inside this was a substantial bank enclosing a flat area where wooden dwellings and outhouses would be erected. The total area of one of these enclosures at Fertiana is about 1500 sq. metres.

What changes these Anglo-Normans brought to Cabragh / Fertiana can only be imagined. Did they clear the forests and replace them with their rundale system of farming? Had they long fields of ploughed land and some fallow strips? Did they save hay in the area and introduce the mute swan and rabbit to the river and fields? We can only speculate, but they have left their marks on a place that adds variety and interest to a beautiful landscape. It is our duty to preserve them so that future generations can encounter them and unfold their secrets.

What we do know is that in 1326 Thomas Stapleton, Lord of Fertiana, living in his grand house on the high ground west of Fertiana, gave permission to the monks of Holycross Abbey to cross the wetlands. It is probably too speculative to suggest that the monks carved that beautiful barn owl into the wall of the old Abbey as an expression of appreciation for his gesture.

There has been a symbiosis between man and the wetlands sine time immemorial. It is this that the Cabragh Wetlands Trust is committed to preserving.

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