Enclosure, Farranmacfarrell, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Farranmacfarrell in County Sligo, there is a recorded archaeological enclosure whose details remain, for the moment, largely out of public reach.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common yet least understood monument types in the Irish landscape. The term covers a wide range of features, from ringforts, which are circular earthen or stone-walled farmsteads typical of the early medieval period, to prehistoric ceremonial enclosures defined by ditches or banks. Without more specific information, the one at Farranmacfarrell sits quietly in that category of places that are known to exist, are formally recognised, and yet remain stubbornly difficult to characterise.
The townland name itself offers a small foothold. Farranmacfarrell derives from the Irish, most likely containing the element fearann, meaning a land portion or territory, combined with a personal or family name, suggesting a place that was once associated with a particular kin group or landholding. Sligo's landscape is dense with earthworks and enclosures from multiple periods, many of them on low drumlin ridges or beside water, and the county has a long record of settlement stretching back well into prehistory. Where exactly this enclosure sits within that sequence, and what form it takes, whether a raised earthen bank, a stone-built cashel wall, or something more subtle still visible from the air, is not yet something the available record can answer with confidence.