Enclosure, Carrowkilleen, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Carrowkilleen in County Mayo, there is a recorded enclosure that exists, for now, almost entirely as a name on a map.
It has been catalogued as an archaeological monument, assigned its place in the official record of Ireland's ancient landscape, and yet the details that would tell us what it actually is, who made it, and when, remain unpublished. That absence is itself a kind of story about how much of rural Ireland is still being pieced together.
Enclosures are among the most common and most varied features in the Irish archaeological record. The term covers everything from the circular earthen banks of a ringfort, a farmstead type built from roughly the fifth to the twelfth century, to the stone-walled enclosures surrounding early Christian sites, to prehistoric boundaries whose original purpose is no longer legible in the landscape. Carrowkilleen as a placename is telling in its own quiet way: it derives from the Irish An Ceathrú Chaol, meaning the narrow quarter, referring to a land division, which suggests a place that has been measured and parcelled and named by people over a very long time. Mayo's landscape holds an extraordinary density of such features, many of them surviving as low earthworks or cropmarks, half-absorbed into farmland that has been worked continuously for millennia.
Without further detail it would be speculation to say more about this particular enclosure, its form, its date, or its condition on the ground. What can be said is that it sits within a county where the bog and the pasture have preserved things that elsewhere were long ago ploughed flat, and where a low grassy bank in a field corner can turn out to be considerably older than it looks.