Earthwork, Cahereamore, Co. Clare

Co. Clare |

Ritual/Ceremonial

Earthwork, Cahereamore, Co. Clare

In the townland of Cahereamore in County Clare, an earthwork sits in the landscape, recorded and mapped but largely undescribed in any publicly available form.

Its name offers one small clue: Cahereamore derives from the Irish, with "cathair" referring to a stone fort or enclosure, suggesting that this corner of Clare has long been associated with ancient constructed spaces. Whether the earthwork relates to that same tradition of enclosure, or represents something else entirely, a field boundary, a ceremonial site, a remnant of earlier habitation, remains a question the place itself must answer.

Earthworks as a category cover a wide range of archaeological features, from raised ringforts and collapsed enclosure banks to the subtle undulations left by long-vanished structures. In Clare, a county with an unusually dense concentration of early medieval and prehistoric monuments, such features are often encountered in farmland that has escaped deep ploughing, their profiles softened but intact after centuries of weathering. Cahereamore sits in a part of the county where that kind of survival is not unusual, and the placename alone points to a locality that was, at some point, considered significant enough to name after a substantial built form.

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