Ringfort (Rath), Newtown, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Ringforts
Walk the pasture above Bannow Bay and you would notice nothing unusual underfoot.
The ground is level, the grass unbroken, the slope unremarkable. Yet aerial photographs tell a different story: the faint cropmarks of a substantial early medieval ringfort, invisible at ground level but legible from above, where differences in soil moisture and crop growth betray the buried ditches beneath.
A ringfort, or rath, was a roughly circular enclosure defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, used as a farmstead and place of domestic security throughout early medieval Ireland, broadly from the fifth to the twelfth centuries. This particular example near Newtown sits towards the top of a north-facing slope looking out over the south-eastern shore of Bannow Bay, about three hundred metres to the north-west. What the aerial record reveals is a bivallate enclosure, meaning one defined by two concentric banks and ditches, with an internal diameter of roughly seventy metres and an external diameter of around ninety-five metres. There is also evidence of a possible third, inner fosse, a ditch feature approximately fifty metres across, which would make this a more complex and presumably more substantial site than a single-ditched farmstead. Double or triple enclosures of this kind are generally associated with higher-status settlements in the early medieval landscape.
Because the site leaves no surface impression in the pasture, there is nothing for the casual visitor to see on the ground. Its existence is known almost entirely through aerial photography, which gives it an oddly abstract quality: a place that is archaeologically real and historically significant, but perceptible only from the air.