Enclosure, Cloongullaun, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Enclosures
In the townland of Cloongullaun in County Mayo, an enclosure sits in the landscape, quietly classified and recorded but not yet widely documented.
Enclosures of this kind, typically circular or roughly oval earthworks defined by a bank and ditch, are among the most common archaeological monument types in Ireland, yet individually they remain poorly understood. They may have served as farmsteads, stock enclosures, or ceremonial spaces, and their dates range across millennia, from the Bronze Age through to the early medieval period. The fact that so many survive in the west of Ireland owes something to lower rates of intensive arable farming, which elsewhere has levelled earthworks that once marked every second hill.
Cloongullaun itself is a small rural townland in Mayo, a county whose boggy, drumlin-scattered terrain has preserved an unusual density of field monuments. Without fuller documentation currently available, the specific character of this enclosure, its dimensions, its condition, its relationship to nearby features, remains to be properly described. What can be said is that it has been noted and assigned monument status, placing it within a tradition of landscape archaeology that has been building in Ireland since the nineteenth century, and that it occupies ground where human activity has left marks going back thousands of years.