Crannog, Talach, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
In a lake somewhere in the townland of Talach in County Mayo, there sits an artificial island that has been there, in one form or another, for well over a thousand years.
A crannog, as these lake-dwelling platforms are known, was typically constructed by driving timber piles into shallow lakebed sediment and piling up layers of stone, brushwood, peat, and other materials to create a stable surface above the waterline. The result was a defensible, often year-round residence, connected to the shore by a submerged causeway that only those who knew the route could safely cross.
Crannogs were built and occupied across Ireland from the Bronze Age onwards, with many remaining in use through the early medieval period and some persisting as late as the seventeenth century. They were not simply refuges but functioning homesteads, sometimes the seats of local lords or prosperous farming families. Mayo, with its abundance of loughs and boggy lake margins, has a considerable number of them, though many remain poorly documented or only partially investigated. The one at Talach is, for now, one of the quieter entries in that inventory, its specific history, dimensions, and date of construction not yet part of the public record.