House - indeterminate date, Lisgoogan, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
House
In the townland of Lisgoogan, in County Clare, there is a structure recorded simply as a house of indeterminate date.
No period is assigned to it, no builder named, no function elaborated. It sits in the archaeological record as a presence without a story, which is, in its own quiet way, a rather curious thing.
Lisgoogan is a small rural townland in Clare, a county whose landscape holds layers of settlement reaching back thousands of years, from the limestone pavements of the Burren to the early Christian remains scattered across its interior. A house of indeterminate date could mean almost anything: a post-medieval vernacular dwelling, the footprint of something far older, or the kind of structure that defies easy classification because the evidence required to date it has simply not survived. The designation itself reflects an honest uncertainty, the kind that archaeologists mark carefully rather than paper over with a confident but unfounded label.