Crannog, Lough Carra, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
Lough Carra in County Mayo holds, just beneath or just above its surface depending on the season, one of the many artificial islands that early medieval and Bronze Age communities constructed across Irish lakes.
A crannog, to use the term that has come down through the Irish language, was essentially a man-made or heavily modified natural island, built from layers of timber, peat, stone, and brushwood, and used as a fortified dwelling or place of refuge. The lake itself is unusual in Irish terms: Lough Carra is one of the few marl lakes in the country, its water rendered a pale, almost luminous blue-green by the calcium carbonate that leaches from the limestone geology of the surrounding land. That quality of light, and the relative shallowness of the water, makes the presence of a constructed island feel quietly conspicuous, as though the lake is showing its hand.
Crannogs were built and occupied across a very long span of Irish prehistory and history, from around 2500 BC in some cases through to the early modern period. They offered obvious defensive advantages, since access by land was impossible and water provided a natural barrier against attack. Communities would have reached them by boat or along submerged causeways, and the islands themselves could support timber structures, animal pens, and storage. Lough Carra sits in a landscape with deep archaeological layering, close to the Neolithic court tomb at Ballintubber and within a region where evidence of sustained prehistoric and early Christian activity is well documented. The crannog on the lough fits into that broader pattern, though the specific details of its construction, the period of its use, and any finds associated with it remain to be fully documented in the public record.
