Crannog, Knocknalappa, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Settlement Sites
In the watery margins of County Clare, at a townland called Knocknalappa, there sits a crannog, one of those man-made or man-modified island settlements that the Irish were constructing from the Bronze Age right through to the early modern period.
Built up from timber, peat, stone, and brushwood in the shallows of a lake or wetland, crannogs served as defended homesteads, their isolation providing natural protection in a landscape that could turn hostile quickly. What makes Knocknalappa quietly compelling is less any dramatic individual story than the fact of its existence at all: a deliberate act of settlement in the middle of water, carried out by people who understood their environment well enough to make it work for them.
Crannogs are found across Ireland and Scotland, and Clare has its share of them, scattered through the county's many lakes and turloughs. The choice of a wetland site was rarely accidental. Families or communities who built on crannogs typically wanted the kind of security that a causeway or a small boat could provide, keeping cattle, goods, and people at one remove from raiders or rival clans. Some crannogs were occupied for remarkably long periods, the layers of material building up over centuries into dense archaeological deposits. Knocknalappa, sitting within its townland name that likely preserves older Gaelic geography, belongs to this long tradition, though the specific dates and details of its occupation remain to be fully documented.