Mound, Carrowneden, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In the townland of Carrowneden in County Mayo, a mound sits in the landscape, recorded and classified but largely unexplained in the public domain.
That bare fact, a named monument with almost no accompanying detail, is itself a kind of curiosity. Ireland's archaeological record is full of such features: earthen mounds that might be prehistoric burial cairns, the remains of a rath or ringfort, a natural glacial feature that attracted human attention at some point, or something else entirely. Without excavation or detailed survey, the category of "mound" is often where the archaeological imagination has to do its own work.
Carrowneden is a small townland in Mayo, a county where the density of ancient monuments, from megalithic tombs to early medieval enclosures, reflects thousands of years of continuous habitation. Mounds of this kind frequently date to the Bronze Age or earlier, when the practice of raising earthen or stone monuments over burials, or simply as markers in the landscape, was widespread across Ireland. Some such mounds were later reused in the early medieval period as assembly points or territorial markers. Without more specific information attached to this particular example, it is not possible to say which tradition it belongs to, or whether it has been investigated at any point.