Ringfort (Rath), Garraunbeg, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Ringforts
A modern road cuts straight through this early medieval enclosure without ceremony, slicing across the northern bank as though the thousand or so years between its construction and the laying of tarmac were no obstacle at all.
That quiet collision of timescales is perhaps the most arresting thing about the ringfort at Garraunbeg, a site that might otherwise pass unnoticed on a south-facing upland slope in County Tipperary.
A rath, as this type of monument is sometimes called, is an enclosed farmstead of the early medieval period, typically dating from somewhere between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Families of middling status lived and kept livestock within a roughly circular area defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, the bank itself formed from the spoil of the outer ditch. Here, that enclosure measures around twenty-one metres across its northeast to southwest axis, with a bank between two and a half and three and a half metres wide. The inner face of the bank still stands to a maximum of about 0.7 metres, the outer face to roughly a metre. A shallow external fosse, the ditch that once reinforced the bank's defensive purpose, is still faintly traceable on the northern side, though the road that now crosses that same stretch has not helped its preservation. No original entrance survives in legible form. What makes the site additionally interesting is its relationship to the wider landscape: another ringfort lies to the north-northwest, suggesting that this upland area once supported a cluster of adjacent farmsteads rather than a single isolated household, a reminder that early medieval settlement in Ireland was often more densely organised than the surviving earthworks, scattered and eroded as they are, might suggest.