Megalithic tomb - court tomb, Castletown, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Megalithic Tombs
In the townland of Castletown in County Mayo, a court tomb survives from the Neolithic period, representing one of Ireland's oldest and most distinctive forms of megalithic architecture.
Court tombs, sometimes called court cairns, are communal stone monuments typically dating to around 4000 BCE, characterised by a semicircular or oval forecourt of upright stones opening onto one or more roofed burial galleries. They are concentrated in the northern half of Ireland, and Mayo has a notable share of them, scattered across bogland and hillside in varying states of preservation.
The form itself tells us something about the communities that built them. The open forecourt is thought to have functioned as a ceremonial space, a place where the living could gather in relation to the dead, perhaps for ritual or communal activity before the enclosed chambers where human remains were deposited. These were not private graves but collective monuments, built and used over generations. The effort involved in quarrying, transporting, and raising the large stone slabs points to organised communities with a sustained interest in marking particular places in the landscape as significant. Mayo's Neolithic inhabitants left a considerable number of such markers, and the example at Castletown is part of that broader pattern, even if its individual details remain, for now, less thoroughly documented than some of its better-known counterparts.