Enclosure, Derryhick, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Derryhick in County Mayo, an enclosure sits in the landscape, recognised as an archaeological monument but currently without a publicly available record to its name.
That gap in the record is itself quietly telling: Ireland holds thousands of such enclosures, earthen or stone boundaries that once defined farmsteads, ceremonial spaces, or settlement areas, and many remain only partially documented, their details held in archive boxes rather than online databases.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common, and most varied, monument types in the Irish countryside. At their simplest, they are a roughly circular or oval bank and ditch enclosing a domestic space, a form of settlement that persisted from the Bronze Age well into the early medieval period. The term covers a wide range of sites, from modest ringforts used by farming families to larger enclosures with more complex functions. Derryhick, a townland name suggesting a possible derivation from the Irish for an oak wood, sits in Mayo, a county with a particularly dense archaeological landscape shaped by centuries of shifting land use, bog growth, and rural depopulation. Without further detail in the available record, the specific character of this enclosure, its date, its dimensions, and its condition, remains uncertain.