Enclosure, Doonfeeny, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
On the western edge of the Barony of Erris in north Mayo, near the townland of Doonfeeny, there survives an ancient enclosure whose details remain largely unrecorded in any publicly accessible form.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common yet least understood monument types in the Irish landscape. They range from early medieval ringforts, which served as defended farmsteads, to prehistoric ritual or funerary boundaries, and distinguishing between them often requires close fieldwork or excavation. That this particular example sits in Doonfeeny adds a certain quiet intrigue: the place-name itself derives from the Irish Dún Féine, meaning the fort or enclosure of the Fianna, a name that already carries the weight of older, half-remembered associations.
Doonfeeny lies on the southern shore of Sruwaddacon Bay, a landscape shaped by blanket bog, low Atlantic light, and a coastline that has seen sparse but continuous human settlement since prehistory. North Mayo as a region contains a remarkable density of ancient monuments, many of them still poorly documented, scattered across townlands that have never attracted sustained archaeological attention. The enclosure at Doonfeeny belongs to this broader, under-examined fabric of the area, a monument that has been noted and recorded as existing but whose form, date, and function remain, for the moment, an open question.