Enclosure, Kinnadoohy, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
On the Atlantic fringe of County Mayo, in the townland of Kinnadoohy, a field enclosure sits quietly in the landscape, recorded as an archaeological monument but not yet accompanied by any publicly available detail about what it is, when it was made, or who made it.
That absence is itself telling. Enclosures of this kind, field boundaries or settlement perimeters defined by earthen banks, ditches, or stone walls, are among the most common yet least understood features of the Irish countryside. They can date from the Bronze Age through to the early modern period, and their purposes range from livestock management to ritual to defence. Without further investigation, the enclosure at Kinnadoohy holds its history close.
Kinnadoohy lies along the coast of the Mullet Peninsula in northwest Mayo, a stretch of land shaped by wind, Atlantic weather, and millennia of human occupation. The peninsula has yielded evidence of settlement reaching back to the Neolithic, and the broader Erris region contains a dense concentration of archaeological sites, many of them inadequately documented. In that context, an unexcavated and undescribed enclosure is unremarkable in one sense and entirely typical in another. Much of what was built and inhabited along this coastline remains poorly understood, surviving as earthworks or cropmarks that have been noted but not yet read.