Ringfort (Rath), Ballythomas, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Ringforts
Some archaeological sites announce themselves with earthworks, standing stones, or at least a waymarker.
This one in Ballythomas, County Tipperary, offers none of that. There is no visible trace at ground level, no raised bank, no hollow in the field. The only reason anyone knows it exists is a circular shadow, a cropmark, caught on a single aerial photograph. Cropmarks form when buried features affect the growth of crops above them, with soil disturbance or filled ditches producing subtle differences in colour and height that become legible only from the air, and only under the right conditions of drought and light.
The photograph in question, taken as part of the Cambridge University Collection of Aerial Photography and catalogued as BDL 64, shows a circular mark on a north-east facing slope in what was tillage land. The site does not appear on the Ordnance Survey six-inch maps, which means it left no cartographic trace in the nineteenth century either, when those maps were compiled. What makes it particularly plausible as a ringfort, the type of circular enclosed settlement that was common in early medieval Ireland roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries, is its context. Approximately thirty metres to the south sits another levelled possible ringfort, recorded separately. Two such sites in close proximity on a gently raised slope follows a pattern seen elsewhere in the Irish landscape, where ringforts sometimes occur in pairs or small clusters, possibly reflecting family or kin groupings farming the same territory across generations.
A rath, to use the Irish term for an earthen ringfort, would typically have consisted of one or more concentric banks and ditches enclosing a domestic space. Whatever stood here has been so thoroughly flattened, whether by centuries of ploughing or earlier land clearance, that the soil itself only hints at its outline when the season is dry enough. It is a site that exists almost entirely as an inference, held together by location, shape, and the company it keeps.



