Enclosure, Burris, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Burris in County Mayo, an enclosure sits in the landscape, recorded and mapped but largely uncharacterised in any publicly accessible form.
Enclosures of this kind, broadly defined as areas bounded by a raised bank, ditch, or wall, turn up across Ireland in considerable variety. Some are the remains of ringforts, the circular farmsteads that housed early medieval families and their livestock. Others mark monastic precincts, burial grounds, or field systems whose origins stretch back further still. Without more specific detail, Burris holds its particular story quietly.
The townland name itself offers a small clue worth considering. Burris, or variants of it, derives from the Irish word for a borough or fortified place, suggesting a settlement with some degree of defined boundary or administrative significance at some point in its past. Mayo as a county is thick with such sites, many of them unexcavated and understood only in outline, their interiors unread. The enclosure at Burris is formally recognised as a monument, which means it carries legal protection, but the specifics of its form, date, and function remain, for the moment, a matter for further enquiry.