Midden, Freaghcastle, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Settlement Sites
Along the western fringes of County Clare, near a townland called Freaghcastle, there is a midden; one of those quietly revelatory features of the Irish landscape that tends to get overlooked precisely because it looks, on the surface, like almost nothing at all.
A midden is essentially a prehistoric rubbish heap, an accumulation of shells, animal bones, ash, and domestic debris left behind by people who lived and ate in a place over a long period of time. What makes such sites remarkable is that rubbish, preserved in the right conditions, becomes evidence. Middens are among the most information-dense archaeological features known, offering direct physical traces of diet, season, trade, and daily life in ways that more dramatic monuments rarely can.
Freaghcastle as a place-name carries its own quiet interest. The element "freach" in Irish generally relates to heather, suggesting a landscape that was once open, scrubby, and probably worked at the margins of more fertile ground. Coastal and near-coastal middens in Clare are often associated with communities who exploited the shoreline across long stretches of prehistory, gathering shellfish and processing marine resources alongside whatever they could raise or hunt inland. The precise date, extent, and character of this particular deposit at Freaghcastle remain, for now, a matter for further investigation rather than settled record.