Enclosure, Kilcorney, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Enclosures
In the townland of Kilcorney, in County Clare, an enclosure sits in the landscape, recorded and mapped but not yet fully described.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common yet least understood monument types in Ireland, ranging from early medieval ringforts, which were enclosed farmsteads typically bounded by an earthen bank and ditch, to later stock enclosures whose origins are harder to pin down. The fact that something has been formally identified and assigned a monument record tells us it was considered significant enough to note, even if the details behind that designation remain thin on the ground.
Kilcorney is a small townland in the Burren region of north Clare, a landscape already dense with prehistoric and early medieval remains. The Burren's limestone geology preserves earthworks and field boundaries with unusual clarity, and enclosures here often survive in better condition than they might elsewhere, protected partly by the same thin soils that made the land marginal for later intensive farming. Without more specific documentation, it is difficult to say whether this particular enclosure is a ringfort, a cashel built from the local stone, or something earlier, but its presence in a townland whose name derives from the Irish "Cill Choirne", suggesting an early ecclesiastical association, adds a layer of quiet interest to an otherwise sparse picture.