Ringfort (Rath), Tullig, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
Scattered across the Irish countryside in their thousands, ringforts are among the most common archaeological monuments on the island, yet each one carries its own particular silence.
The example at Tullig in County Clare is a rath, the term used for an earthen ringfort, typically a circular enclosure defined by one or more banks and ditches. These were the farmsteads and homesteads of early medieval Ireland, occupied roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries, their earthworks serving less as military defences than as boundaries marking status, enclosing livestock, and separating the domestic world from the open land beyond.
Clare is unusually well supplied with such monuments, sitting as it does in a landscape where both stone and earth lent themselves to enclosure-building across many generations. The townland of Tullig takes its name from the Irish tulach, meaning a small hill or hillock, a word that appears repeatedly across Irish placenames and often signals the kind of elevated, well-drained ground that early farming communities actively sought out. Whether the Tullig rath sits on such a rise, and what its earthworks look like today, remains difficult to say with precision given how little has been formally recorded and made publicly available for this particular site. What can be said is that its presence in the monument record places it within a dense tradition of rural settlement that shaped the Clare landscape long before the arrival of Norman mottes, tower houses, or planted towns.