House - indeterminate date, Ballybaun, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
House
In a field at Ballybaun in County Galway, a low grassy bank curves into an L-shape and does little to announce itself.
It is barely knee-height, no more than sixty centimetres tall and about one and a half metres wide, and the turf has long since softened whatever edges it once had. Yet this unassuming ridge is thought to preserve the outline of a rectangular house, its surviving dimensions suggesting a width of five metres, with a length that extended beyond what can now be confidently measured.
The bank sits within the north-western quadrant of a larger enclosure, a type of monument common across the Irish landscape, where a circular or sub-circular earthwork would have defined a domestic or agricultural space, sometimes associated with early medieval settlement. The house, if that is what the remains represent, would have been tucked into one corner of that enclosed area, a position that often indicates a working relationship between the two features, the enclosure providing shelter or security, the structure within it providing habitation. The date of the building is not known. The cautious phrase used to describe it, "may possibly be," reflects the honest limits of what the eroded evidence allows anyone to say with confidence.