Ringfort (Rath), Carrownagry, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Carrownagry in County Clare, a ringfort sits in the landscape, its earthen banks tracing the outline of a life lived roughly fourteen centuries ago.
These circular enclosures, known variously as raths or ringforts, were the standard form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically dating from around the sixth to the twelfth century. A rath consisted of one or more raised earthen banks with external ditches, enclosing a homestead and its associated buildings. Thousands survive across Ireland to varying degrees, many reduced to a subtle rise in a field, visible mainly from the air or in low winter light.
Carrownagry itself is a small townland in Clare, a county whose limestone terrain and long history of settlement have preserved a notable density of such monuments. The townland name likely derives from the Irish, as is common across Connacht and Munster borderlands, where placenames carry layered references to terrain, families, or long-vanished features of the landscape. Without further surviving documentation specific to this site, the ringfort remains in a category familiar to anyone who has studied the Irish countryside closely: present, mappable, but largely silent about the particular family or community that once sheltered within its banks.
