House - indeterminate date, Cartron, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
House
There is nothing left to see at Cartron, and that absence is itself the point.
What was once recorded as a probable hut circle, a roughly circular stone structure of the kind used as a dwelling across early medieval Ireland, has been reduced to nothing by quarrying. No wall, no outline, no scatter of stone remains above ground. The place survives only in a mid-twentieth-century classification, a diameter, and a pair of measurements that now describe something that cannot be found.
In 1952, a researcher named McCaffrey catalogued the structure, noting a circular form roughly 14.3 metres across, defined by a wall just under a metre wide and about 0.8 metres high. Even at that point the site was described as very ruined, and the northern portion had already been lost to quarrying. It sat approximately 60 metres north of a cashel, a type of stone-walled ringfort enclosure that was a common feature of the early Irish landscape, and the proximity of the two structures suggests some kind of associated settlement activity, though the date of the hut circle remains indeterminate. Whatever relationship once existed between them can no longer be read from the ground.