Enclosure, Coolderry, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Enclosures
In the townland of Coolderry in County Clare, an enclosure sits in the landscape, recorded and numbered, but not yet fully explained.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common archaeological features in Ireland, ranging from the circular earthen ringforts of the early medieval period to earlier prehistoric enclosures whose purposes remain debated. They might have served as farmsteads, ceremonial spaces, or cattle enclosures, and their earthen banks or stone walls, often barely visible above the grass, have survived largely because later generations found them awkward to plough through rather than worth preserving. The fact that this one has been formally recorded places it within a long catalogue of such sites across Clare, a county whose limestone plains and low hills have preserved an unusual density of ancient field monuments.
Beyond its classification and location, the specific details of this enclosure, its dimensions, its construction, its date, and whatever surface features remain, are not yet publicly available. It exists in that particular limbo familiar to anyone who has tried to research minor Irish monuments: acknowledged, catalogued, but not yet described in any accessible form. Clare's archaeology more broadly spans thousands of years, from the court tombs and portal dolmens of the Neolithic through the dense concentration of ringforts that dot the county's interior, so an enclosure at Coolderry could plausibly belong to almost any period between the Bronze Age and the early medieval era. Without excavation or detailed survey data in the public domain, it remains a shape in a field, waiting for context.