Enclosure, Cloonfaghna, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Enclosures
On the crest of a hill in the pastureland of Cloonfaghna, a faint arc in the ground marks what was once an enclosed space of some significance.
The feature is a subcircular enclosure, roughly 34 metres across at its widest, shaped by what is now little more than a degraded scarp, a low eroded slope where a more substantial bank or ditch once defined a clear boundary. A later field wall cuts across it from the east to the south-west, the everyday geometry of agricultural Ireland quietly overwriting something considerably older.
Enclosures of this type are among the most common, and most quietly erased, archaeological features in the Irish landscape. Many are thought to be the remains of raths or ring-forts, the enclosed farmsteads of early medieval Ireland, though without excavation it is rarely possible to say with certainty what any individual example was built for or when. Their hilltop positions often reflect a concern with visibility and drainage as much as with defence. The Cloonfaghna example is recorded in the Archaeological Inventory of County Galway Vol. II, compiled by Olive Alcock, Kathy de hÓra, and Paul Gosling and published in 1999, which places it among a broader survey of such sites across North Galway. Its dimensions, roughly 34 metres north-west to south-east and 32.5 metres north-east to south-west, suggest a modest but not insignificant enclosed area, comparable in scale to many surviving ring-forts elsewhere in the county.
What remains is genuinely difficult to read in the field. The scarp is degraded, the field boundary obscures a significant arc of the circuit, and pasture has long since softened whatever edges once existed. It is the kind of site that rewards patience and low, raking light, the sort of conditions under which a subtle change in ground level becomes briefly legible before the eye loses it again.