Crannog, Tullabrack, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Settlement Sites
In the townland of Tullabrack in County Clare, a crannog sits quietly in water or boggy ground, largely unrecorded in any publicly accessible form.
Crannogs are artificial or partially artificial islands, typically built from timber, peat, brushwood, and stone, and used as lake dwellings from the Bronze Age right through to the early modern period in Ireland. They were chosen for the natural defensive advantage of being surrounded by water, and many remained in use across multiple eras, accumulating centuries of occupation in their waterlogged layers. The one at Tullabrack is a registered monument, which means its existence and location are formally noted, but beyond that basic fact, very little has been made available to the general public.
The silence around this particular site is itself telling. Clare has no shortage of crannogs; the county's many loughs and wetlands made it fertile ground for this kind of settlement. Some Clare crannogs have yielded significant finds through excavation or chance discovery, including wooden vessels, metalwork, and animal bone, all preserved by the anaerobic conditions that waterlogged sites create so effectively. Whether Tullabrack's example has been surveyed in any detail, or whether it remains essentially unexamined, is not currently a matter of public record. It occupies that curious category of known unknowns: officially acknowledged, archaeologically uncharacterised, and easy to overlook precisely because nothing dramatic has drawn attention to it.