Enclosure, Ballycurrin Demesne, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
Within the grounds of Ballycurrin Demesne in County Mayo, there survives an enclosure of sufficient archaeological interest to have earned a formal monument record, yet its precise character remains tantalisingly unresolved.
Enclosures of this kind in the Irish landscape can represent almost anything across a very wide span of time: a ringfort from the early medieval period, the earthwork boundary of a forgotten settlement, a cashel built from stone, or the remnant of a later land-management feature absorbed into a demesne landscape during the eighteenth or nineteenth century. The ambiguity is part of what makes such sites quietly compelling. A demesne, the private parkland attached to a landed estate, has a habit of preserving older features simply because the land was never ploughed or developed in the way that farmland was, which means earthworks that might otherwise have been erased can survive in reasonable condition beneath old parkland trees.
Ballycurrin Demesne sits in the west of Mayo, a county whose landscape holds a dense and varied archaeological record running from prehistoric field systems to early Christian foundations. The specific history of this enclosure, including its date, dimensions, and the circumstances of its survival within the demesne, is not yet in the public record in any detail, which means it occupies that particular category of Irish monument that is known to exist and known to matter, but whose full story is still waiting to be told.