Crannog, Lough Cullin, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
Beneath the surface of Lough Cullin, a small artificial island sits in the water, constructed by human hands at some point in Ireland's long prehistoric or early medieval past.
It is a crannog, a type of dwelling built on timber platforms or compacted layers of peat, stone, and brushwood, deliberately placed in a lake for the security that water provided on all sides. Lough Cullin, which lies in County Mayo near the town of Foxford and connects to the larger Lough Conn to the north, is exactly the kind of quiet, reed-fringed lake where such a structure might pass entirely unnoticed to a casual eye.
Crannogs were built and used across Ireland from roughly the Bronze Age through to the early modern period, with many seeing continuous or repeated occupation across centuries. Their island position made them naturally defensible without the need for elaborate fortification, and they often served as the homes of people of some local status. The specific history of this particular example on Lough Cullin, including who built it, when it was occupied, and what, if anything, has been recovered from it, remains largely undocumented in publicly available sources at present.