Enclosure, Ballynew, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Ballynew, in County Mayo, there is a recorded archaeological enclosure.
That much is certain. Beyond the bare fact of its existence on the map, the details remain, for now, out of reach. Enclosures of this kind are among the most common yet most varied monuments in the Irish landscape. The term covers everything from the circular earthen banks of a ringfort, where early medieval farming families lived and kept their livestock, to the more irregular boundaries of a field system or a ceremonial site. Without further specifics, Ballynew holds its shape quietly, unnamed in any fuller sense, a feature in the ground that has been noticed and recorded but not yet fully described in the public record.
Mayo is a county dense with such sites. Its boglands have preserved earthworks and field boundaries that elsewhere were long ago ploughed flat, and its townlands carry layers of occupation stretching back thousands of years. An enclosure in this landscape might be prehistoric, early medieval, or something in between. The very ordinariness of the classification is part of what makes it interesting: the Irish countryside is so thoroughly marked by human activity across so many centuries that even an unnamed, undescribed enclosure in a small townland represents a tangible but still-legible trace of people who shaped the land and were shaped by it.