Enclosure, Coolcronaun, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Coolcronaun, in County Mayo, there sits an enclosure that has been recorded, catalogued, and assigned its place in the official inventory of Irish monuments, yet remains almost entirely undescribed.
It has a name, a location, and a classification, and beyond that, the paper trail goes quiet.
Enclosures are among the most common, and most varied, archaeological features in the Irish landscape. The term covers a wide range of structures, from the circular earthen banks of a ringfort, which typically served as a defended farmstead during the early medieval period, to the ditched boundaries of prehistoric settlements or the walled enclosures associated with ecclesiastical sites. Without further detail, it is impossible to say which tradition this particular example belongs to, or how old it might be. Coolcronaun is a rural townland in Mayo, a county with an exceptionally dense archaeological record, shaped by thousands of years of farming, settlement, and ritual activity. That an enclosure here has been identified and noted is itself a small signal that something deliberate once took place on this ground, that someone, at some point, drew a boundary and enclosed a space for a reason that mattered to them.
What that reason was, and when, remains for now an open question.