House - indeterminate date, Gragan, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
House
At Gragan in County Clare, there is a circular stone structure so low and grass-covered that a person could walk across it without realising they had crossed a wall at all.
What remains is a roughly circular hut site, measuring approximately 8.5 metres east to west and 8.3 metres north to south, its outline preserved in a grassed-over stone bank no more than a quarter of a metre high and about a metre and a half wide. A small break on the eastern side, just 20 centimetres across, may be all that survives of the original entrance.
The structure sits within a larger enclosure to the northeast of its centre. Such enclosed settlements were common throughout early medieval Ireland, though this particular site carries no confirmed date, and the honest answer is that nobody knows exactly when it was built or who lived there. The stonework retains some original facing on the north-northwest side, suggesting the bank was once a more deliberately constructed feature rather than simple field clearance. That facing detail, small as it is, implies someone took care in building it, shaping the stone rather than simply piling it. The roughly circular form is typical of domestic hut sites found across the Irish countryside, where a single family or small household would have occupied a timber or thatch structure within a low stone or earthen boundary.