Hut site, Faunarooska, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Settlement Sites
In a grazed field roughly fifty metres from the Rathborney River in County Clare, a low circular bank marks out a space where someone once lived, worked, or sheltered.
The bank itself is modest, barely 0.7 metres high on the interior and only 0.3 metres on the outside, built from earth and stone and measuring about two metres across at its width. The whole enclosure spans just under ten metres in diameter, which gives a sense of the scale of life conducted within it; compact, functional, and now quietly folded back into the agricultural landscape around it.
What makes the site quietly interesting is its context. It sits within a multiperiod field system, meaning the surrounding landscape carries traces of human activity from more than one era, successive generations having organised the land around them in ways that sometimes overlapped or overwrote what came before. The hut site itself is sub-circular in plan, a form common to early medieval and earlier settlement in Ireland, where a bank of earth and stone defined the boundary of a small domestic or agricultural space. Rubble has accumulated against the exterior of the bank between the north and east-north-east, and the ground to the north shows signs of disturbance, though whether this reflects original construction, later interference, or simple decay over time is not recorded. The interior slopes steeply down towards the east and has been colonised by whitethorn scrub. About sixty metres to the northwest lies a related enclosure, suggesting that this was not an isolated structure but part of a small cluster of activity in this corner of the Burren fringe.