Crannog, Lough Rea, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Settlement Sites
Beneath the surface of Lough Rea, the lake that gives the County Galway town of Loughrea its name, lies the remnant of a crannog, an artificial or partially artificial island constructed from timber, stone, peat, and brushwood.
These structures were among the most enduring forms of settlement in early medieval Ireland, used from the Bronze Age through to the seventeenth century, and occasionally beyond. They were built in shallow lake margins, close enough to shore for practical access but isolated enough to offer real defensive advantage, and many were occupied and rebuilt across several centuries by successive generations.
The presence of a crannog in Lough Rea places this small Galway lake within a broader pattern of lakeside habitation that stretched across Ireland for millennia. Lough Rea itself sits in a low limestone landscape in the east of County Galway, and the shallow, reed-fringed character typical of such lakes would have made it well suited to this kind of construction. Crannogs elsewhere in Ireland have yielded remarkable finds, from fine metalwork and decorated combs to animal bones and preserved organic materials that rarely survive on dry-land sites, making even a poorly documented example of potential archaeological significance.