Ringfort (Rath), Newpark, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In the townland of Newpark in County Mayo, a ringfort sits in the landscape doing what ringforts have done for well over a thousand years: quietly persisting.
These circular enclosures, known in Irish as raths, were the farmsteads of early medieval Ireland, typically defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches enclosing a central living area. They number in the tens of thousands across the island, yet each one represents a household, a family, a working agricultural life conducted somewhere between the fifth and twelfth centuries.
The Newpark example is recorded as a rath, the earthwork variety of ringfort rather than a cashel, which would be its stone-built equivalent. Beyond that classification, the documentary record for this particular site is thin. What can be said with confidence is that its presence in a Mayo townland named Newpark, a name that itself carries the faint echo of post-medieval estate landscaping, hints at a layered history of land use in the area, early medieval settlement overlaid by later reorganisation of the kind that remade much of the Irish countryside under plantation and estate management from the seventeenth century onward.
Ringforts were long dismissed in folklore as fairy forts, a reputation that, whatever its origins, had the practical effect of preserving many of them from deliberate destruction. Whether that protective superstition has served the Newpark site well is difficult to say without more detailed survey information coming to light.