Boundary mound, Derroogh, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ritual/Ceremonial
In the townland of Derroogh, in County Galway, a mound sits in the landscape doing the quiet, largely thankless work of marking where one piece of land ends and another begins.
Boundary mounds are among the least celebrated of Ireland's earthwork monuments, easy to walk past or dismiss as a natural rise in the ground, yet they represent one of the most persistent human impulses: the need to say, precisely and physically, this is mine and that is yours.
As a class of monument, boundary mounds were raised to demarcate territorial limits, whether between townlands, estates, parishes, or larger administrative units. They could be ancient in origin, some dating back to the early medieval period or beyond, while others were constructed or adapted during the centuries of plantation and land reorganisation that reshaped so much of Connacht. The townland of Derroogh itself sits within a part of Galway where the landscape carries layer upon layer of such reorganisation, and a mound of this type would have served as a legible, durable marker in an era before maps were common or trusted. The mound is, in a sense, an argument made in earth.