Enclosure, Loughbown, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Enclosures
In the undulating grassland of Loughbown in north Galway, a farmer at some point built a feeding pen for livestock and set it neatly into the inner face of an ancient earthwork bank, apparently without much ceremony.
That act of practical repurposing says a great deal about how old monuments quietly dissolve into working land. The structure in question is a subcircular enclosure, roughly 35 metres east to west and 31 metres north to south, of the kind once used across Ireland for settlement, agriculture, or ritual purposes during the early medieval period and beyond. Its bank has degraded considerably, and a field boundary now runs directly over part of it, so the original line of the enclosure requires some imagination to follow.
Enclosures of this type are among the most common archaeological features in the Irish countryside, yet their very familiarity tends to work against them. They survive in varying states, from well-defined ringforts with clear banks and ditches to barely legible traces like this one at Loughbown, where the enclosing element at the western side has been further disturbed by farm buildings. Field boundaries radiate outward from the bank at the north-east and east, a pattern that often suggests the monument served as a fixed point around which later land divisions were organised, even long after its original function was forgotten. The site was recorded in the Archaeological Inventory of County Galway, compiled by Olive Alcock, Kathy de hÓra, and Paul Gosling and published in 1999, which documented monuments across north Galway with exactly this kind of methodical attention to what remains and what has been lost.