Tomb, Derrylahan, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Tombs & Memorials
In the townland of Derrylahan in County Mayo, a tomb sits in the landscape, recorded and classified but almost entirely undescribed in any publicly accessible form.
It has a monument number, a map reference, and a place in the official inventory of Irish archaeological sites, yet the details that would tell us what it actually looks like, how old it is, or what tradition of burial it belongs to remain, for now, out of reach. That gap is itself a kind of fact about how much of rural Mayo's prehistoric and early historic archaeology still awaits proper documentation and publication.
Mayo is extraordinarily dense with ancient funerary monuments. The county contains court tombs, portal tombs, and wedge tombs dating from the Neolithic and into the Bronze Age, as well as later burial cairns and enclosures that are harder to classify without excavation or detailed survey. A tomb in a townland like Derrylahan could belong to any of these traditions. Court tombs, for instance, are megalithic structures typically consisting of a roofless forecourt leading into one or more stone-built burial chambers, and they cluster notably in the west and north of Ireland. Without more information it is not possible to say which category this particular monument falls into, or what condition it is in today.