Ringfort (Cashel), Tiraninny, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In the townland of Tiraninny in County Mayo, a cashel sits quietly in the landscape, classified and recorded but largely unaccompanied by detail.
A cashel is a ringfort built from stone rather than earthen banks, a form of enclosed farmstead typical of early medieval Ireland, roughly dating from the sixth to the twelfth centuries. Thousands of them survive across the country in varying states of preservation, yet each one occupied a particular family's world, a working centre of agriculture and daily life rather than a monument in any ceremonial sense.
Beyond its classification and location, the specifics of this particular cashel remain elusive for now. What can be said is that the townland name Tiraninny places it within a part of Mayo where early settlement left its mark quietly on the ground, and the choice of stone construction over earth suggests either a local abundance of building material or a preference that ran through the communities of this region. The cashel form, common enough to seem unremarkable in the aggregate, becomes more interesting at the level of the individual site, where questions of who built it, when it was abandoned, and what traces of occupation survive beneath the surface remain genuinely open.