House - indeterminate date, Ungwee, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
House
On a low hillock rising just above the surrounding blanket bog in Ungwee, County Galway, the grass-covered remains of a small stone hut sit in almost complete anonymity.
No one knows when it was built, or by whom. The structure is recorded simply as a house of indeterminate date, which in itself says something about how quietly it has resisted classification.
The hut is subcircular in plan, measuring roughly 4.4 metres east to west and 3.6 metres north to south, a space so modest that it would have sheltered a very small number of people at most. Its defining walls have long since been swallowed by turf and grass, visible now only as low earthen rises. Traces of an internal division survive towards the southern end, suggesting the interior may have been partitioned at some point, perhaps to separate sleeping space from a working or storage area. The entrance faces east. The hillock it sits on is a practical choice: blanket bog, which covers vast stretches of Connaught, is waterlogged and unstable ground, and even a slight natural elevation would have offered a drier, firmer foundation. Paul Gosling's Archaeological Inventory of County Galway, published by the Stationery Office in 1993, records the site as part of a wider survey of West Galway's built heritage, though the hut's age remains unresolved.
What makes this small ruin quietly compelling is precisely what it withholds. The eastern entrance, the hint of internal arrangement, the careful choice of elevated ground: these details suggest deliberate, practical thinking, but they stop well short of telling a fuller story. The bog around it preserves and obscures in equal measure.