Enclosure, Ballyherragh, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Enclosures
In the townland of Ballyherragh, in County Clare, there is a recorded enclosure.
That is more or less all that can be said with confidence, and therein lies something quietly worth noting. The monument is listed, it has been assigned a record, and yet the details that would tell us what it actually is, how old, what shape, what purpose, remain formally undocumented in any publicly accessible form. In Irish archaeology, an enclosure is a broad category covering everything from prehistoric ringforts, which were earthen or stone-walled farmsteads, to ecclesiastical enclosures surrounding early medieval monasteries. Without further information, Ballyherragh's example sits somewhere in that long continuum, anonymous for now.
Clare is a county that rewards this kind of patience with ambiguity. Its landscape holds an extraordinary density of earthworks, many of them poorly understood even after excavation, and townlands like Ballyherragh often carry traces of settlement that predate any written record. The very name Ballyherragh likely derives from the Irish, suggesting a place with its own layered identity long before anyone thought to catalogue it. For now, the enclosure remains one of those monuments that archaeology has acknowledged but not yet fully described, a shape in the ground with a reference number and not much else beside it.