Enclosure, Derry, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
In the townland of Derry in County Mayo, there is a monument classified simply as an enclosure, a category that covers everything from prehistoric farming boundaries to the defended ringfort-style settlements that pepper the Irish landscape.
The bare designation tells you just enough to know that something deliberate was built here, that people organised the land in a way that left a mark legible to archaeologists, and almost nothing else.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common and least celebrated features of the Irish countryside. A ringfort, or ráth, typically consists of a circular earthen bank and ditch enclosing a domestic space, and tens of thousands once existed across the island. Others are defined by stone walls, souterrains (underground passages thought to serve as storage or refuge), or clusters of post-holes that only reveal themselves to aerial photography or careful excavation. The townland name Derry, derived from the Irish doire meaning an oak wood, hints at a landscape that was once heavily wooded and gradually cleared for agriculture, probably across the early medieval period when enclosure-building was at its height. Whether this particular site belongs to that era or to an earlier or later tradition remains, for now, an open question.