Crannog, Aghany, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
In the landscape of Aghany in County Mayo, a lake once held an artificial island.
A crannog, built by piling timber, stone, and brushwood into shallow water to create a defensible platform for habitation, was one of the most enduring forms of settlement in early medieval Ireland, with some sites remaining in use across many centuries. The example at Aghany is recorded as a monument, which places it in the company of thousands of such structures dotted across Irish loughs and wetlands, each one a quiet remnant of a community that chose water as its boundary wall.
Crannogs were constructed and occupied from the Bronze Age through to the seventeenth century in some parts of Ireland, serving variously as farmsteads, refuges, and residences for people of relatively high social standing. The effort involved in building one, driving piles, hauling stone, and maintaining the structure against the constant pressure of water, suggests that whoever lived at Aghany had both the resources and the reason to do so. Without further documentation currently available for this particular site, the precise date of its construction, who built it, and what became of it remain open questions. What is certain is that it was considered significant enough to be formally recorded as part of the archaeological heritage of Mayo.