Crannog, Moing An Iarainn, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
In the boggy landscape of County Mayo, a crannog sits in a place called Moing An Iarainn, a name that translates roughly from the Irish as the bog or marsh of iron.
Crannogs are artificial or partially artificial islands, typically constructed from layers of timber, peat, brush, and stone, built out into lakes or wetlands and used as dwelling places from the Bronze Age well into the early medieval period. They are found across Ireland and Scotland in considerable numbers, though each one carries its own particular character depending on the environment that surrounds it. The iron reference in this townland name is itself a quiet curiosity, suggesting a possible historical association with iron-working or ore in the locality, though what precise connection that history has to the crannog itself remains, for the moment, difficult to untangle.