Ringfort (Rath), Ballyvaskin, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Ballyvaskin, in County Clare, there is a ringfort, and that, for now, is very nearly all that can be said with certainty.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths, are among the most common archaeological monuments in Ireland, circular enclosures typically defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, built largely during the early medieval period as farmsteads or places of refuge. Several thousand survive across the country in varying states of preservation. Most have accumulated at least some layer of documentation over the decades. This one, quietly, has not.
What makes the Ballyvaskin site unusual is less any particular feature of the monument itself and more the particular silence surrounding it. Clare is a county with a dense and well-studied archaeological landscape, shaped by centuries of farming, movement, and settlement. Ringforts dot its fields in considerable numbers, many of them recorded, measured, and placed in context. That one should sit in this county, carrying a formal designation, and yet remain effectively undescribed in publicly accessible records, gives it a slightly eerie quality, the outline of a presence without the substance. The townland name, Ballyvaskin, derives from the Irish, though the precise etymology is local knowledge that the monument's sparse paper trail does not illuminate.