Burial, Lisbaun, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Burial Sites
In a field at Lisbaun in County Mayo, almost everything has been levelled.
A rath, the circular earthen enclosure typical of early medieval Irish farmsteads, was cleared at some point, leaving the landscape largely flat. Almost everything, that is, except for one small, sod-covered mound on the western arc of what was once the enclosing bank. It measures roughly two metres long, 1.7 metres wide, and stands somewhere between 0.8 and one metre high. Modest by any measure, it is the kind of feature that could easily be mistaken for a natural irregularity in the ground.
What makes this small rise worth noticing is the reason it survives at all. Local tradition holds that the mound marks the location of a burial, and that belief is precisely why it was never cleared along with the rest of the earthwork. Whether the mound is in fact a remnant of the rath's original bank, a genuine burial feature, or some combination of the two remains uncertain. Raths were domestic enclosures, used by farming families across Ireland from roughly the sixth to the twelfth centuries, and their banks and ditches have been levelled in enormous numbers over the centuries of agricultural improvement. The fact that this fragment persisted, protected not by any formal designation but simply by the weight of local memory, gives it a different kind of significance to the monuments that survived by chance or obscurity.