House - indeterminate date, Kilskeagh, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
House
On a north-east-facing slope in Kilskeagh, County Galway, the remains of a drystone house sit roughly ten metres from a hilltop enclosure, the two structures close enough to suggest a relationship but separated by enough uncertainty that neither quite explains the other.
The house itself is a two-roomed rectangular building, oriented north-east to south-west and measuring just over eleven metres in length by five metres in width. What makes it quietly compelling is the quality of its construction: drystone building, in which stones are fitted without mortar, can be crude or remarkably refined, and here the craft is described as well-built, even if time and weather have since undone much of it.
The south-east and south-west walls still stand to around 1.8 metres, which is enough to give a real sense of the original structure, while the remaining walls have collapsed inward, leaving the interior choked with fallen stone. Immediately to the south-east lies a hollow area of similar dimensions, roughly eleven metres by five metres, its edges defined by further collapsed walling along the east and south sides. This adjoining space may have served as an enclosure for animals or storage, though its exact function remains unclear. The house carries an indeterminate date, meaning it cannot currently be placed with confidence in any particular century, a reminder of how much of the Irish rural built landscape resists easy classification. Without documentary evidence or excavation, structures like this one exist in a kind of temporal suspension, legible as domestic in form but mute on the question of when, and by whom, they were lived in.