Ringfort (Rath), Ballinlag, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
Sitting on a ridge in pasture land in Co. Mayo, this oval earthwork has had a long afterlife as farmland infrastructure.
A rath is an early medieval ringfort, typically a circular or oval enclosure defined by an earthen bank and ditch, most likely the enclosed homestead of a farming family. What makes this particular example quietly interesting is how thoroughly later agricultural activity has absorbed and altered it, without quite erasing it. Along the south-west to north arc of the bank, the original earth-and-stone structure has been re-faced externally with stone and pressed into service as an ordinary field boundary, the ancient enclosure quietly folded into the working landscape around it.
The enclosure itself is oval, measuring roughly 49 metres on its north-east to south-west axis and 36.5 metres across. The bank survives to an external height of about 1.3 metres on its south-south-east side, though only around 0.6 metres on the interior. There are two breaks in the bank, one to the north-west and a slightly wider one to the south-south-west, which may represent original or later entrances. Inside, the ground slopes gently downward from north-west to south and south-east, and the surface is uneven and hummocky in the way that buried or collapsed features often produce. A faint linear feature runs across the interior, possibly the remnant of an internal wall or fence, though it trails off into a heap of field-clearance stones now largely swallowed by overgrowth. More conspicuously, a pit roughly eight metres in diameter and two metres deep has been quarried into the north-west portion of the bank and the interior beside it, partly filled in with field debris over time. A somewhat larger pit sits just outside the enclosure to the north-east. The bank itself is now heavily engulfed in overgrowth, which simultaneously obscures and preserves what remains beneath.