Enclosure, Fahy More, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Enclosures
In the townland of Fahy More, in County Clare, there is a recorded archaeological enclosure whose details remain almost entirely uncharted in the public record.
It has been catalogued, given a monument number, and noted on maps, yet the substance of what it is, how old it might be, and what form it takes on the ground has not been made publicly available. That gap is itself quietly telling, a reminder of how many sites across Ireland exist in a kind of official limbo, known to archaeology but not yet narrated.
Enclosures are among the most common monument types in the Irish landscape. The term covers a wide range of features, from the circular earthen raths and ringforts of the early medieval period, typically dating from around 500 to 1000 AD and used as enclosed farmsteads, to earlier prehistoric enclosures whose purposes ranged from settlement to ritual. Without further detail specific to this site, it is not possible to say which tradition this example at Fahy More belongs to, or whether any surface features remain visible. The townland name itself, Fahy, derives from the Irish "faithche", meaning a green or exercise ground, which occasionally signals the proximity of an early settlement site, though that connection should not be pushed too far.
What can be said is that County Clare is densely layered with such monuments, and that enclosures in rural townlands often survive as subtle earthworks, low banks or slight depressions in pasture that reward close attention at low sun angles in winter, when raking light picks out traces that vanish entirely in summer growth.