Ringfort (Rath), Lugaphuill, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In the townland of Lugaphuill in County Mayo, a ringfort sits in the landscape, largely unrecorded in the public domain and quietly going about the business of being ancient.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths, are among the most common archaeological monuments in Ireland, with estimates suggesting somewhere between 40,000 and 50,000 once existed across the island. They are generally understood as enclosed farmsteads of the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries, defined by one or more circular earthen banks and ditches that sheltered a family, their livestock, and their grain stores. The fact that so many survive at all, even as softened humps in pasture fields, says something about the durability of compacted earth and the reluctance of later farmers to level them entirely, whether from practicality or the older superstition that raths were fairy forts best left undisturbed.
Lugaphuill is a small townland in Mayo, a county that contains a substantial number of such monuments distributed across its varied terrain of bog, drumlin, and coastal plain. The rath at Lugaphuill belongs to this broader pattern of early medieval rural settlement, the physical residue of a farming community that organised its world within a circular boundary. Without excavation or detailed field survey, it is rarely possible to say more about an individual ringfort than its general form and likely period, though some raths have yielded evidence of houses, hearths, souterrains (underground stone-lined passages, often used for storage or refuge), and occasionally metalworking debris. Whether this particular example retains its original earthworks clearly, or has been reduced by centuries of agriculture, is not currently a matter of public record.