Enclosure, Ballygommon, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
At Ballygommon in County Mayo, there is a recorded archaeological enclosure that has yet to yield much of its story to the public record.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common, and most quietly mysterious, monument types in the Irish landscape. The term covers a broad range of structures, from prehistoric ring-forts and early medieval farmsteads to later field boundaries, all sharing the basic principle of a defined area set apart from its surroundings by a bank, ditch, or wall. What exactly the Ballygommon enclosure represents, who built it, and when, remains formally undocumented in any publicly accessible form.
The absence of detail is itself a small piece of the broader picture. Mayo is a county whose landscape holds an extraordinary density of archaeological remains, many of them still incompletely catalogued. The townland name Ballygommon, like so many in the west of Ireland, likely preserves a fragment of older Irish, though without documented analysis it would be unwise to read too much into it. What can be said is that enclosures across this part of Connacht span a very long period, and that the physical form of such a monument, whether a slight earthen bank visible only in low winter light or a more substantial ringwork, often holds clues that the ground itself keeps long after the written record falls silent.