Enclosure, Cloongaheen, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Enclosures
In the townland of Cloongaheen, in County Clare, lies an archaeological enclosure that has been formally recorded yet remains almost entirely undescribed in any publicly accessible form.
An enclosure, in the Irish archaeological sense, typically refers to a defined area bounded by earthworks, a bank, a ditch, or some combination of these, and may date to almost any period from the prehistoric through to the early medieval. What makes Cloongaheen's example quietly notable is precisely its anonymity: it is on the map, it has a record number, and yet almost nothing about its character, dimensions, or date has made it into the open literature.
Cloongaheen is a small rural townland in Clare, a county whose landscape is densely layered with ringforts, cashels, field systems, and enclosures of various periods. Without further detail, it is not possible to say whether this particular feature is a farmstead enclosure of the early medieval period, a prehistoric ritual site, or something else entirely. That uncertainty is itself part of the picture. Ireland's archaeological record contains thousands of such features, many identified only from aerial photography or early Ordnance Survey mapping, and not all of them have received ground investigation or detailed description. This one, for now, sits in that intermediate state, known to exist, not yet fully known.