Enclosure, Bellavary, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
Outside the small County Mayo village of Bellavary, an archaeological enclosure sits in the landscape recorded but largely undescribed, a feature that has been catalogued without yet being explained.
Enclosures of this kind are among the most common and most enigmatic monument types in the Irish countryside. The term covers a broad range of structures, from the circular earthen banks of a ringfort, which would have enclosed a farmstead in the early medieval period, to earlier ceremonial or defensive enclosures whose purposes remain debated. Without further detail, the Bellavary example holds its history quietly.
Bellavary itself sits in an area of Mayo with deep archaeological layers. The broader region around the Castlebar hinterland has yielded evidence of settlement and activity stretching back thousands of years, and enclosures in this part of Connacht frequently turn out to be the remains of raths or cashels, the stone or earthen enclosed settlements that once formed the basic unit of rural life across early medieval Ireland. Whether this particular enclosure belongs to that tradition or to something older or more specialised is, for now, an open question.