Ringfort (Rath), Breeoge, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Ringforts
Most ringforts announce themselves with a raised bank and a clear entrance, the familiar grammar of early medieval rural settlement in Ireland.
The rath at Breeoge, sitting on flat to undulating ground close to Ballysadare Bay in County Sligo, has lost much of that grammar. No enclosing bank survives, no entrance is visible, and what remains is primarily an oval mound with steep sides, measuring roughly 27 metres by 18 metres internally. It is, in other words, a site that has shed most of its defining features and asks the observer to read what is left.
What remains is still legible, if you know where to look. At the northern end, the ground slopes more gently and an elongated hollow runs through the surface. This may be the trace of a souterrain, an underground stone-lined passage or chamber that early medieval farmsteads commonly used for storage or as a place of refuge, now collapsed inward and visible only as a depression. In the south-west, a fosse, essentially a defensive ditch, survives to a width of around three metres. The fosse is one of the clearest indicators that this was once a functioning rath, the Irish term for a ringfort defined by earthen rather than stone construction, typically enclosing a farmstead and its inhabitants during the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to twelfth centuries. Together, the mound, the hollow, and the partial ditch suggest a site that was once considerably more substantial than it appears today.