Crannog, Cartron, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
In a small townland in County Mayo, somewhere beneath or just above the waterline of a local lake, lies a crannog, one of Ireland's most distinctive and enduring forms of ancient settlement.
A crannog is an artificial or partially artificial island, typically built from timber, stone, peat, and brushwood, and used as a dwelling place from the Bronze Age right through to the early modern period. They were chosen for their defensibility, sitting just offshore and accessible only by boat or a deliberately concealed causeway. The fact that one survives at Cartron, even as a recorded monument, is a quiet reminder of how densely layered the Irish landscape remains.
Crannogs were not marginal or desperate places. Many served as the residences of high-status families, and excavations elsewhere in Ireland and Scotland have recovered fine metalwork, imported goods, and elaborate wooden structures from their waterlogged interiors. The anaerobic conditions of lake sediments preserve organic material exceptionally well, meaning that crannogs have yielded wooden vessels, leather, and textiles that would vanish entirely on dry land. The Cartron example sits within a Mayo landscape that has produced numerous such sites, reflecting a population that understood how to make productive use of its lakes and wetlands across many centuries.