Crannog, Cluain Bú, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Settlement Sites
Beneath the surface of a Galway lake lies a small artificial island that has effectively vanished from view.
A crannog, which is a man-made island dwelling constructed from layers of timber, peat, brush, and stone, was once a common feature of Irish lakes and wetlands, used as a defensible residence from the Bronze Age well into the early medieval period. At Cluain Bú, the water has quietly reclaimed what was once a discrete and recognisable feature of the landscape.
The third edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, published in 1934, recorded the site as a small circular island approximately twenty-five metres in diameter. That modest but telling detail, the neat circular outline that so often signals human construction rather than natural accident, placed it firmly in the category of probable lake dwellings. A second possible crannog lies roughly a hundred metres to the northeast, suggesting that this stretch of water may once have supported more than one such settlement. Since the mapping was done, however, a rise in water level has submerged whatever remained visible, leaving nothing to see from the shore today.