Enclosure, Kilcurrivard, Co. Galway

Co. Galway |

Enclosures

Enclosure, Kilcurrivard, Co. Galway

In the townland of Kilcurrivard in County Galway, there survives an archaeological enclosure that has, for now, slipped quietly past the reach of the digitised record.

The enclosure itself, a defined boundary of earthwork or stone, possibly the remains of an early settlement, a farming landscape, or a defended residence, belongs to a class of monument found in considerable numbers across Ireland, yet each one carries its own particular character shaped by local terrain and local history. This one, for the moment, keeps its specifics close.

An enclosure in the Irish archaeological sense typically refers to a roughly circular or oval area defined by a bank, ditch, wall, or some combination of these, and the type spans a very wide chronological range, from prehistoric farmsteads through to early medieval ringforts and beyond. Kilcurrivard as a placename has the texture of older Irish landscape terminology, and the townland sits within a part of Connacht where the ground, when examined carefully, frequently yields traces of long habitation, land management, and occasional defended settlement. Without more detail presently available, the enclosure's date, dimensions, and condition remain open questions, the kind that tend to reward patient local enquiry or a careful walk of the land.

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Pete F
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