Travel


The magnificent Céide Fields in County Mayo


The Ceide Cliffs (on which the Ceide Fields rest) are over 300 million years old and rise up to 370 feet above sea level
The Ceide Cliffs (on which the Ceide Fields rest) are over 300 million years old and rise up to 370 feet above sea level

When one thinks of Stone Age archaeological sites, Stonehenge, Altamira and Newgrange may come to mind. Most likely The Céide Fields will not. But they should.

On the way to Ballycastle, County Mayo I was not sure what to expect. Neither was I sure, given the treacherous nature of the cliff-side Irish road, that I would arrive.

My experience in archaeology lay with the ancient Mediterranean world - the colossal monuments of Greece and Rome. I had visited marble temples stretching into the sky and seen vast cities of intricate stone streets. The idea of field walls did not conjure up images of importance or grandeur.

The Ceide Fields Visitor Center

The Fields were not featured in a single book I had read nor were they covered in any class I had attended (not even "Neolithic and Bronze Age Farming Communities"). I was skeptical of what might be so significant on the cliffs of Mayo. I shouldn't have been.

For this is not just another archaeological monument or visitor center, it is the world's most extensive Stone Age Monument - the remains of a highly skilled and organized agrarian Neolithic society, which has been preserved undisturbed for nearly 5,000 years.

The Fields are almost completely concealed underneath a blanket bog, which has safeguarded the site from both natural and human destructive forces, being that it is hard to erode or loot something under four meters of densely packed plant matter. This is both a blessing and a curse for the archaeologists, including my guide, Gretta Byrne. The bog and size of the site make conventional archaeological techniques, such as the use of trenches, largely infeasible.

Patrick Caulfield, a local schoolteacher, first discovered the site during the 1930s. While cutting peat bog for fuel, Patrick came across piles of dry-mortared stone stacks that he concluded were man-made and due to their location deep under the bog, ancient. Patrick's son, Seamus, grew up to be an archaeologist, and it was he who began the first true excavation of the Céide Fields in 1970.

Seamus discovered an oval enclosure within which there were a number of postholes for roof supports. The enclosure, probably a domestic structure, was replete with an outside hearth and what conceivably had been an animal pen. Pottery shards and other domestic materials were found within the enclosure.


Nster.com


7 Comments

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IT IS OF GREAT INTEREST TO THE WORLD....GREAT READ...MAYO
Me and mine have been to Ceide Fields several times and were enthralled. My people were forced out of Killala, Co. Mayo, not far from the site - because of An Gorta Mor and the oppressors. It is an experience that anyone of Irish background - and everyone else - should experience. It is not just the Fields but the spectacular views of the mighty sea that is incredible. And be sure to stop at the villiage of Killala - some great pubs with real craic (spelling?). P.S. Would somebody please correct my name: it is Scott McGowan!
I found this article to be very interesting. I had never heard of this site before reading about it here.
I'd love to see RTE get together with NOVA and produce a TV show/mini series on this. I'm with inishturk on wanting to see more of this kind of article here. Good work folks!!!
Excellent article -just sorry I'll be in Mayo too late in May to visit on this trip. This is the kind of content that interests me -Irish history, language and culture - in addition to news.
I'll be there in April!
This site is definitely on my list of places to visit on my next trip to Ireland.
 




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