Enclosure, Doon, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Enclosures
On a low rise in farmland near Doon in north County Galway, a circular earthwork sits so quietly that it barely registers as anything at all.
The bank, once describing a full ring roughly twenty metres across, now survives only from the north around through the east to the southwest, the rest lost to centuries of agricultural use. What makes this otherwise unremarkable scrap of raised ground worth a second thought is a detail preserved in local memory: at some point in the not-too-distant past, human bones were uncovered here during digging.
Circular enclosures of this kind are a familiar presence across the Irish landscape, ranging from Bronze Age burial monuments to the ringforts, or raths, that were used as defended farmsteads throughout the early medieval period. Without excavation it is difficult to say which tradition this particular earthwork belongs to, but the reported discovery of human remains adds a layer of ambiguity. Some enclosures were built primarily as settlements, others as places of burial, and occasionally the two functions overlapped across different periods of use on the same ground. The bones, unexcavated and unrecorded by any formal investigation, remain anecdotal, but local accounts of this kind have a way of preserving what the landscape itself no longer makes obvious.