Enclosure, Ballyconnoe, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Enclosures
On an elevated plateau in County Clare, a roughly oval enclosure sits embedded within one of the more complex field systems in the region, its outline still legible from aerial imagery despite centuries of subsequent activity.
The enclosure measures approximately 70 metres north to south and 55 metres east to west, a substantial footprint suggesting this was once a significant organised space, whether a settlement, a farming enclosure, or something combining both functions. What makes it particularly arresting is how thoroughly it has been absorbed into the surrounding landscape: field boundaries radiate outward from its perimeter in almost every direction, and a later boundary running roughly north-northeast to south-southwest cuts straight across its centre, bisecting the original form as if whoever laid it out had little interest in, or knowledge of, what lay beneath.
The enclosure was reported to the National Monuments Service by Ros Ó Maoldúin and sits within what is described as a multiperiod field system, meaning the landscape around it has been shaped and reshaped across multiple distinct eras of human activity. That layering is part of what makes the site difficult to read at ground level. A second enclosure of comparable size lies roughly 22 metres to the northwest, raising the possibility that the two were related, perhaps part of a planned or organically expanded complex. The irregular density of the surrounding field network, visible in Digital Globe imagery from 2011 to 2013, hints at intensive and prolonged land use on this plateau, with the subcircular enclosure quietly at its centre.