Crannog, Lough Conn, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
Beneath the surface of Lough Conn, in north County Mayo, lies an artificial island built by human hands, most likely centuries before anyone thought to write the fact down.
A crannog, to use the Irish term, is exactly that: a man-made or partially man-made island, typically constructed from layers of timber, peat, stone, and brushwood, and used as a defended dwelling place. They appear across Ireland and Scotland from the Bronze Age onward, with many remaining in use well into the medieval period, and the one recorded on Lough Conn is a quiet reminder that this broad, relatively shallow lake was once a place people chose not merely to fish or travel across, but to live upon.
Lough Conn sits in the barony of Tyrawley, draining eventually northward toward Killala Bay. It is one of the larger lakes in Connacht and has long been known as good fishing water, but its archaeological dimension is less frequently remarked upon. Crannogs on such lakes were typically home to a single family or small community, reachable only by boat or causeway, and that physical separation was very often the point. The water served as a moat. Whether the Lough Conn example dates to the early medieval period, when crannog use was particularly widespread in Ireland, or to an earlier or later phase, is not something the available record makes clear.