Enclosure, Shanvallybeg, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Shanvallybeg, in County Mayo, a field boundary or earthwork has been noted, mapped, and assigned a monument record, yet the details that would tell us what it actually is remain largely out of reach.
An enclosure, in archaeological terms, can mean many things: a ringfort dating to the early medieval period, a cashel built from dry stone, a small enclosed farmstead, or something older still. Without further documentation, this particular example sits quietly in the landscape, classified but not yet fully explained.
Shanvallybeg, whose name derives from the Irish for "small old townland", is one of countless small territorial divisions across Mayo that carry within their names and soils the traces of centuries of settlement. Mayo as a county has an exceptionally dense concentration of archaeological monuments, from megalithic tombs and field systems on the slopes of Céide Fields in the north to ringforts and cashels scattered across its interior. An enclosure of the type recorded here would most likely belong to the early medieval period, roughly 500 to 1000 AD, when enclosed farmsteads were the dominant form of rural settlement across Ireland. These were typically circular earthen banks or stone walls enclosing a domestic space, and their remains survive in their thousands across the Irish countryside, often visible only as slight rises or cropmarks.
What makes this particular site quietly interesting is not any documented feature but rather its status as a known unknown: recorded, given coordinates, assigned a category, and then left to wait. The landscape around it almost certainly holds more context than any current record can supply.