Ringfort (Rath), Tonavoher, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Tonavoher in County Clare, a ringfort sits in the landscape, belonging to a category of monument so common in Ireland that it is easy to overlook any individual example, and yet so quietly persistent that each one still carries a certain weight.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths when defined by earthen banks and ditches rather than stone, were the enclosed farmsteads of early medieval Ireland, typically dating from around the fifth to the twelfth centuries. Thousands survive across the country, some reduced to a faint circular crop mark, others still holding their banks with reasonable definition. The one at Tonavoher is recorded, named, and classified, which is itself a form of survival.
Beyond its classification as a rath and its location in this particular Clare townland, the detailed record for this site has not yet been made publicly available. That gap is worth noting not as a frustration but as a reminder of how much archaeological work remains in progress across Ireland. Clare is a county with an exceptionally dense concentration of earthworks, enclosures, and early settlement remains, many of them still being properly documented. The rath at Tonavoher belongs to that broader fabric of an agrarian landscape shaped over centuries by small farming communities who enclosed their homes, their livestock, and their daily lives within a circular bank and ditch, creating a form so practical and so repeated that it became one of the defining marks of early Irish settlement.