Enclosure, Farmhill, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Farmhill in County Mayo, an enclosure sits in the landscape, recorded and classified but not yet fully described.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most quietly persistent features of the Irish countryside, boundary lines drawn in earth or stone that can date from the early medieval period through to post-medieval farming use, and whose original purpose, whether defensive, agricultural, or ceremonial, is often only legible through detailed fieldwork and excavation.
The details specific to this particular site remain officially unpublished, which itself says something about the scale of Ireland's archaeological inheritance. Mayo alone contains thousands of recorded monuments, from promontory forts along its Atlantic coastline to ringforts, enclosures, and field systems scattered across its interior drumlins and boglands. Many of these features were shaped by communities farming the same ground across successive centuries, each generation leaving traces that later became invisible until aerial survey or ground inspection brought them back into view. An enclosure at Farmhill fits within that broad pattern, a boundary of some kind, at some point in time, that mattered enough to the people who made it to be worth the considerable labour of construction.
