Ringfort (Rath), Parcellstown, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Ringforts
On the western edge of a long north-to-south ridge in County Westmeath, a roughly circular earthwork sits at the summit with views opening out in every direction.
What makes this particular rath quietly interesting is not dramatic preservation but the layering of time visible in the ground itself: the same enclosed space that once served as an early medieval farmstead later had cultivation ridges ploughed across its interior, and those ridges are still faintly readable today, running roughly east to west through the enclosure and continuing into the surrounding field.
A rath, or ringfort, is a circular or oval enclosure defined by an earthen bank, sometimes accompanied by a ditch, used as a defended farmstead during the early medieval period in Ireland, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. This example, which measures approximately 34 metres north-north-east to south-south-west and 32 metres west-north-west to east-south-east, was already recorded on the 1837 Ordnance Survey six-inch map as a roughly oval earthwork. By the time the revised 25-inch edition was published in 1913, it was described as a well-formed oval. When the monument was examined in 1980, the enclosing bank survived in varying condition around the circuit: broader and lower to the north-east and east, reduced to a scarp elsewhere, and noticeably higher and steeper along the south-south-west to north-north-west arc. An outer berm, a low flat-topped shelf of earth, is visible along part of the western side, though unusually there is no sign of a fosse, the encircling ditch that typically accompanies such banks. A gap of around six metres in the bank at the north-east may mark the original entrance. About 190 metres to the south-west lies a separate rectangular enclosure, a different form of monument altogether, making the ridge something of a palimpsest of past land use across different periods.