Ringfort (Cashel), Burrane, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
At Burrane in County Clare, a cashel sits quietly in the landscape, its existence noted and classified but its particulars still waiting to be told.
A cashel is a ringfort built from stone rather than earth, a circular enclosure whose dry-stone walls once defined the boundary of a farmstead, a family's world made solid and defensive. Thousands of them survive across Ireland, concentrated especially in the west where good building stone was never scarce, and each one represents a decision made somewhere between the fifth and twelfth centuries about where to live and how to hold ground.
The Burrane cashel belongs to this broad tradition of early medieval settlement, a period when rural Ireland was organised around dispersed family units, each occupying its own enclosed homestead rather than gathering into villages. The cashel form was particularly suited to the rocky terrain of counties like Clare, where glacial limestone lies close to the surface and timber was harder to come by than it was further east. Within such enclosures, people kept livestock, built timber or wicker structures for sleeping and storage, and lived lives that are now largely recoverable only through archaeology. What survives at Burrane is the stone itself, the outline of that boundary, persisting long after everything inside it has gone.