Ringfort (Rath), Urlan Beg, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
Between forty and fifty thousand ringforts are thought to survive across Ireland, yet each one sits in its own particular patch of ground, shaped by whoever raised it and whoever farmed around it for the centuries that followed.
The example at Urlan Beg, in County Clare, is one of these quiet presences, a rath that has held its position in the landscape while the world reorganised itself around it.
A rath is an enclosed farmstead of the early medieval period, typically dating from roughly the fifth to the twelfth century, defined by one or more circular earthen banks and ditches. The bank was not primarily a military fortification but a boundary, a marker of household territory that kept livestock in, wolves out, and signalled to neighbours exactly where one family's authority began. Clare is particularly well furnished with them, its limestone-underlain farmland having been densely settled during that period. Urlan Beg sits in the south of the county, a townland whose name, from the Irish meaning something close to "little border land" or "little borderland plot", hints at a landscape long parsed into holdings and margins.