Ringfort (Rath), Breeoge, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Ringforts
A modest rise in a County Sligo pasture holds what remains of a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, the kind of enclosed farmstead that once dotted the early medieval landscape in their thousands.
What makes this particular example quietly puzzling is that a road appears to have sliced clean through its western edge at some point, leaving an incomplete arc where a full circle once stood. The original interior diameter was likely around eighteen metres, a fairly typical domestic scale for a rath, which would have enclosed a family's dwelling and perhaps some outbuildings behind an earthen bank.
What survives today is fragmentary but legible. Along the eastern and south-eastern arc, the remains of a bank are still traceable, measuring roughly a metre and a third wide with an interior height of just twenty centimetres. It sits in pasture on a gentle rise, which was the preferred positioning for these structures, offering drainage and a degree of visibility. Unusually, there are no detectable signs of a surrounding ditch, which typically accompanied the bank in ringfort construction, nor is there any clear trace of an original entrance. Whether those features were always absent, have simply eroded away, or were destroyed when the road was cut through, is impossible to say with certainty.