Earthwork, Aghamore, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In the townland of Aghamore in County Mayo, an earthwork sits in the landscape, categorised and numbered but not yet fully explained.
Earthworks of this kind are among the most common and least legible features of the Irish countryside. They might be the eroded remains of a ringfort, a raised enclosure of earth and bank within which a farming family once lived during the early medieval period, or they might represent something older still, a boundary, a ceremonial mound, or a field system long since absorbed by grass and time. The label is a holding category as much as a description, applied when the shape is clear but the function is not.
Aghamore is a parish in the barony of Costello, a quietly agricultural stretch of east Mayo where the land has been worked and reworked across many centuries. The area sits within a broader region that saw sustained settlement from the prehistoric period onward, and earthworks recorded here tend to reflect that long continuum of human use. Without more detailed survey information available for this particular monument, the specifics of its form, its date range, and its relationship to surrounding features remain open questions.