Factory, Cill Mhuirbhigh, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Manufacturing
Cill Mhuirbhigh, known in English as Kilmurvey, sits on the largest of the Aran Islands, Inis Mór, in Galway Bay.
That a structure recorded simply as a "factory" should appear in the archaeological inventory of a place more commonly associated with prehistoric stone forts and early Christian remains is, in itself, quietly arresting. Industrial designation in an island context like this tends to suggest something modest in scale but locally significant, perhaps a kelp-processing works or a small textile operation, the kind of enterprise that once shaped the rhythms of coastal communities but left behind little more than a footprint in the landscape.
The Aran Islands had a long tradition of kelp burning, in which seaweed was gathered and reduced to ash in stone kilns, producing an alkali used in the manufacture of glass and soap. This trade was commercially significant from the seventeenth century onwards, declining sharply in the nineteenth century as cheaper industrial alternatives emerged. Linen and wool processing also had a presence in the west of Ireland during the same period. Without more detailed records it is not possible to say with certainty which of these activities, if any, took place at this particular site, but the presence of a designated factory in Kilmurvey points to a moment when the island was engaged with wider economic networks, not simply a self-sufficient farming and fishing community.
Kilmurvey itself lies close to Dún Aonghasa, the remarkable dry-stone clifftop fort on the island's southern edge, and the area around the village retains a strong sense of the layered occupation that characterises Inis Mór as a whole. The factory site, wherever its precise boundaries fall, is part of that same accumulation of human activity, industrial rather than ceremonial, but no less a piece of the island's long story.