Bush Island, Pollawarla, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
Bush Island sits in the townland of Pollawarla in County Mayo, recorded as an archaeological monument but currently one of those places whose past remains officially undigitised and largely unspoken for.
It carries a name that suggests something modest and peripheral, the kind of small island feature that appears on older Ordnance Survey sheets without explanation, its significance neither announced nor entirely forgotten.
Mayo's landscape is threaded with islands, both coastal and lacustrine, many of which served prehistoric and early medieval communities as defensible settlements, monastic retreats, or seasonal farming outposts. Small island sites across the west of Ireland frequently preserve traces of human activity precisely because they were never intensively farmed in later centuries, their waterlogged or rocky ground discouraging the kind of deep ploughing that has erased so much elsewhere. Without the specific details that would pin down what Bush Island actually holds, whether a crannog, a field system, a burial, or something else entirely, it remains a named place on the archaeological record rather than a described one, which is itself a particular kind of historical condition.