Sponsored by:
GlobalGenealogy.com
History & Genealogy eStore

Go Shopping Now >>
   HOME    GLOBAL GENEALOGY eSTORE    UPCOMING EVENTS   CONTACT US  

Search

Global Gazette Articles


GlobalGenealogy.com
Books, Software & more



Advanced Search

History & Genealogy
Books & eBooks

   Canada
      Canadian General Interest       Alberta
      British Columbia
      Manitoba
      New Brunswick
      Newfoundland & Labrador
      Northwest Territories
      Nova Scotia & Cape Breton
      Nunavut
      Ontario/Upper Canada
      Prince Edward Island
      Quebec/Lower Canada
      Saskatchewan
      Yukon

      Acadia/Acadian
      Diaries & Letters
      First Nations, Aboriginal, Métis
      Home Children
      Biographies
      20th Century Military
      Fenian Raids 1866-1871
      Rebellion of 1837-38
      War of 1812
      French/ Indian War 1756-63
   England
   Ireland
   Scotland
   United Empire Loyalists
   USA
   Wales
   more countries...

   Genealogy How-To
   Conservation How-To

Archival & Other

   Archival Products
   Conservation How-To
   Charts, Forms, Kits
   Gravestone Rubbing Kit
   Magnifiers
   Gift Certificates

Family Tree Software

   Family Tree Maker (PC)

   Family Tree Maker (Mac)

   Reunion family Tree (Mac)

"Family tree software saves you time and money. Fast and easy data entry helps you create professional looking family tree charts, reports and books".
More information

Family Tree Maker
2012 for PC

Family Tree Maker
For Mac


Information

   Free eNewsletter
   Catalog - Autumn 2011
   The Global Gazette
   Link to our site

  Family Tree Maker 2012 More info ...


Article Published February 12, 2002



County Mayo (Ireland): An Outline History
By: Bernard O'Hara and Nollaig ÓMuraíle,
Copyright: Mayo Ireland Ltd.



Prehistory

County Mayo has a rich archaeological heritage dating from prehistoric times to the present. (Achaeology is the interpretation of our past from the study of buildings and objects made by human beings. We are dependent on archaeology alone in any attempt to study the prehistoric period and thereafter to complement what is recorded in written sources). According to the present state of archaeological knowledge, the first people arrived in Ireland sometime before 7000 BC during what is called the Mesolithic period. They were nomadic tribes of hunters and fishing people who built no permanent structures such as houses or tombs. The first colonisation of Mayo probably took place during that period.

In the fourth millennium BC, during the Neolithic period, another group of settlers arrived in Ireland, our first farmers, who introduced agriculture and animal husbandry to the country as well as the skills of pottery-making and weaving. They started a custom of burying their dead collectively (usually cremated) in large stone-built chambered tombs known as megalithic tombs, the earliest surviving architectural structures in the country. There are over 1,500 such tombs identified in Ireland with approximately 160 in County Mayo. This fact indicates the importance of the Mayo region during the Neolithic period and into the Bronze Age (c. 2000- 400 BC) when this phase of tomb-building came to an end.

In the literature on archaeology, Irish megalithic tombs are divided in four classes: court-tombs, portal tombs, passage-tomb and wedge-tombs, each style named after its chief diagnostic feature. Each class of tomb probably represents a new major colonisation of the country by different groups of tomb-builders. The remains of some megalithic tombs are so badly damaged that they can not be accurately identified by type and are consequently recorded as unclassified megalithic tombs. Examples of all types decorate the Mayo landscape. Eighty-five of the 400 plus court-tombs known in Ireland are located in Mayo. About 30 of these tombs are situated in the hinterland of Bunatrahir and Killala Bays in north Mayo. Others are scattered throught the county in the hinterland of Ballina and in places like Killasser in east Mayo, Ballycroy and Belmullet in the north-west, Claremorris, Cong, Achill, Newport and Louisburgh. There are seven known portal-tombs in the county (two in Ballyknock near Ballycastle; one in Claggan, near Ballycroy; one at Gortbrack North and another at Knocknalower, near Belmullet, one in Achill and another in Killasser); one identified passage-tomb at Carrowreagh near Bonniconlon (alias Bunnyconnellan) , with other possible ones in the Cong/Ballinrobe region. There are over 30 wedge-tombs and a similar number of unclassified megalithic tombs in the county.

The blanket bog which covers parts of Ireland developed from the late 3rd millennium BC onwards and in places covered the field systems, habitation-sites and tombs of the early farmers. Extensive pre-bog field-systems with stone walls have been discovered embedded in the bog in many parts of Ireland, notably at Behy, Glenulra and Belderrig , west of Ballycastle in County Mayo. The Behy/Glenulra region, known as the 'Céide Fields', contains a 1,500 hectare archaeological site, the most extensive Stone Age monument in the world.

Mayo has many known monuments from the Bronze Age: 34 wedge-tombs; 12 stone alignments/rows; 24 stone circles; close to 300 ancient cooking-sites known as fulachta fiadh. The county has also several monuments from the Early Iron Age (c. 400BC-AD 400): over 250 crannógs (lake-dwellings); over 100 promontory forts, and numerous ringforts and souterrains.

next page»









Free Newsletter

Enter email address:




Archived Newsletters

The Flip-Pal Mobile Scanner is small, lightweight and does a top-notch job scanning photographs, documents and just about anything you can think of.... without a computer....... Read on...



Dr. Elliott gives clues to finding your ancestral county, then the parish and townland within the county. He explains how Irish archival centres work and describes how you can flesh out your ancestors’ lives and what you might find in cemeteries and.... Read on...



This is an ongoing series with more books to be added each year. So far, Dr. Elliott has published the following books in his.... Read on...



Focuses on the Ypres Salient, Passchendaele, Vimy, and the “Hundred Day”s battles and considers lesser-known battlefields as well. Battle maps, contemporary maps, photographs, and.... Read on...



First Métis Families
of Quebec, 1622-1748
Volume 1: 56 Families

traces the descendants of the 56 original Métis families for up to three generations. Richly detailed, fully sourced, and indexed, this work....... Read on...



Jonathan Oates’s handbook is an essential introduction for anyone who is keen to take their family history research back into the more distant past..... Read on...



This final volume of Some Early Scots in Maritime Canada identifies thousands of Scots who immigrated to Maritime Canada in the years between the 1770s and the 1870s--most of them located by....... Read on...



This new digital media edition of Thomas Moule's Old County Maps of England 1836 faithfully reproduces the original detail and artistry of this fine cartographer....... Read on...








The Global Gazette is a unit of GlobalGenealogy.com Inc.
Copyright© 1995 - 2012 GlobalGenealogy.com Inc.    All Rights Reserved