Ringfort (Cashel), Killanena, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Killanena in east County Clare, a cashel sits quietly in the landscape, largely unannounced and unelaborated in the formal record.
A cashel is a type of ringfort built from dry-stone walling rather than earthen banks, a construction method that suited the rocky terrain of the west of Ireland and reflected the same basic social function as its earthen counterparts: the enclosure of a farmstead, probably belonging to a single family or small kin group, during the early medieval period roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Thousands of ringforts survive across Ireland, yet each one carries its own particular relationship to the ground it occupies, and the cashels of Clare, set against the limestone geology of the region, have a physical presence that earthworks simply do not.
Killanena itself is a small rural parish in the barony of Tulla Upper, edging towards the low hills that separate the Clare lowlands from the Lough Derg shoreline. The area has a quiet density of early medieval activity that tends not to announce itself loudly. Cashels like this one were not monuments in any ceremonial sense; they were working enclosures, the kind of place where cattle were kept overnight, where a family's most portable wealth was protected, and where the boundary between domestic space and the wider, less controlled landscape was made tangible in stone. The labour involved in raising dry-stone walls of any significant height should not be underestimated, and their survival, even in ruined form, speaks to the durability of the material if not always to the completeness of the structure.