Crannog, Knocknalappa, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Settlement Sites
In the shallow lakelands of County Clare, at a place called Knocknalappa, there sits a crannog, an artificial island constructed by human hands and used as a dwelling place, sometimes over many centuries.
Crannogs are among the more quietly extraordinary survivals in the Irish landscape: built from timber, peat, stone, and brushwood piled into a lake or bog, they served as defended homesteads, their water setting providing natural protection. They were in use from the Bronze Age well into the early medieval period, and occasionally beyond, making some of them remarkably long-lived sites.
The Knocknalappa crannog sits in Co. Clare, a county with a considerable concentration of these lake-island settlements, reflecting both the abundance of suitable wetland and a long tradition of occupation in the region. Without more detailed excavation records or documentary sources for this particular site, it is difficult to say when it was built or by whom, but its presence in the landscape is a quiet marker of the kind of settled, strategic life people organised around water in early Ireland. The name Knocknalappa itself, likely derived from Irish, hints at the layered place-naming that accumulates over such sites across generations.