Enclosure, Roo, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Enclosures
In the townland of Roo in County Clare, there sits an enclosure that has been formally recorded as an archaeological monument yet remains largely undescribed in any publicly available form.
That gap between official recognition and accessible knowledge is itself a kind of curiosity. The site exists on maps and in registers, carrying the quiet weight of classification, but the details that would explain what it actually is, who made it, and when, have not yet made it into the public record.
Enclosures of this kind in County Clare span an enormous range of types and periods. Some are the remains of ringforts, the circular or oval earthwork enclosures that served as defended farmsteads during the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to the twelfth centuries, and which are among the most common archaeological features in the Irish landscape. Others might be the remnants of later field systems, monastic enclosures, or even prehistoric settlement sites. Without specific detail for this particular example in Roo, the category alone tells us only that something deliberate once defined a boundary here, and that enough of it survives, or survived when it was recorded, to warrant classification. Clare is a county unusually dense with such survivals, its landscape preserving earthworks that elsewhere were levelled by more intensive agriculture. Roo itself is a small townland, and the enclosure within it is the kind of feature that might easily be passed without recognition by anyone not already looking for it.