Midden, Tóin An Tseanbhaile, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
At a place whose Irish name translates roughly as "the back of the old townland", the ground holds something deceptively ordinary: a midden.
These accumulated deposits of shellfish remains, animal bone, ash, and domestic refuse were the rubbish heaps of earlier communities, and they have a habit of preserving the everyday details that grander monuments miss entirely. The one recorded at Tóin An Tseanbhaile, in County Mayo, sits quietly in a landscape that has been shaped by coastal and rural life for centuries, its precise contents a matter for whoever eventually gets close enough to study it properly.
Middens along the Irish Atlantic seaboard tend to reflect the long rhythms of communities living close to the shore, drawing on shellfish beds and seasonal catches, and discarding what they could not use. The name Tóin An Tseanbhaile suggests this was already understood, even in local memory, as a place associated with an older settlement, one that had perhaps shifted or dissolved before anyone thought to write it down. In that sense the midden and the placename are telling the same story from different angles: both point to occupation and habitation whose details have largely slipped from the record.