Ringfort (Rath), Kilcloher, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Kilcloher, on the Atlantic-facing edge of County Clare, there sits a rath, a ringfort of the kind that once served as a farmstead and family enclosure during Ireland's early medieval period.
Raths, typically circular earthwork enclosures defined by one or more raised banks and ditches, were the most common form of rural settlement in Ireland between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries. Thousands survive across the country in varying states of preservation, yet each occupies its own particular patch of ground, shaped by local topography and the specific needs of whoever built it. The one at Kilcloher is among those that have slipped quietly through the documentary record, present in the landscape but largely unaccompanied by detail.
Kilcloher itself lies in the Kilkee area of west Clare, a part of the county where the land runs out towards sea cliffs and the geology shifts into the carboniferous limestone that defines so much of Clare's character. Ringforts in this region tend to occupy slightly elevated ground, positioned to command a view of the surrounding farmland their builders depended on. Beyond its classification as a rath and its location within the townland, the specific history of this enclosure, its dimensions, condition, and any finds or features associated with it, remains undocumented in publicly available sources at present.
For anyone passing through west Clare with an interest in early medieval settlement, the broader landscape around Kilcloher rewards careful attention. The area sits within a part of Ireland where ringforts are numerous enough to appear on the horizon with some regularity, low circular earthworks half-absorbed into field boundaries or grazing land. Identifying the specific example at Kilcloher may require local knowledge and a close reading of the terrain, as sites of this kind can be easily overlooked from a road.