Promontory fort - coastal, Acaill Bheag, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Forts
Off the coast of Mayo, the small island of Acaill Bheag carries the remains of a promontory fort, a type of defended enclosure that uses the natural drama of coastal geography as its first line of protection.
The builders of such forts, typically active during the Iron Age though some sites were used across much longer periods, chose headlands or cliff-edged spurs where the sea did most of the defensive work. A single bank and ditch across the landward approach was often enough to complete the enclosure, leaving the occupants guarded on three sides by nothing but open water and drop. On a small island, that logic becomes even more concentrated.
Acaill Bheag sits in the shadow of its larger neighbour Achill Island, and the presence of a defended site there speaks to a pattern of settlement and territorial marking that stretched across even the most marginal Atlantic edges of early Ireland. Promontory forts are found in considerable numbers along the western seaboard, where communities were evidently willing to commit significant labour to fortification even on remote or difficult ground. The specific history of this particular fort, its date of construction, the extent of its earthworks, and any finds or excavation work associated with it, remains largely undocumented in publicly available sources at present.