Enclosure, Killaderry, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Enclosures
In the townland of Killaderry, in County Clare, an enclosure sits in the landscape, recorded and mapped but not yet fully described.
It belongs to a category of monument that is quietly ubiquitous across Ireland, yet rarely discussed: a defined boundary, most likely of earthen bank or stone, that once enclosed a space for purposes that may have been domestic, agricultural, or ceremonial, and that now survives as little more than an earthwork readable from the ground or from aerial photography.
Enclosures of this kind can date from the Bronze Age through to the early medieval period and beyond, and their interpretation depends heavily on excavation or detailed survey. In Clare, a county with a dense concentration of ringforts, cashels, and field systems, such monuments often represent the remnants of early farming settlements. A ringfort, to give the most familiar example, is simply a circular enclosure, usually with an earthen bank and external ditch, that served as a farmstead during the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Whether Killaderry's enclosure fits that pattern or represents something older or differently shaped is not yet established in any publicly available record.