Ringfort (Rath), Curraghnagarraha, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ringforts
There is a moment, walking across certain Irish fields, when the ground does something unexpected: it dips, rises, and describes a rough circle that feels too deliberate to be natural. That is roughly the experience on the south-east-facing slope at Curraghnagarraha in County Waterford, where a grass-covered subcircular enclosure sits quietly in the landscape, its edges defined not by dramatic earthworks but by a gentle scarp and a shallow surrounding ditch.
The site is a rath, the most common type of ringfort found across Ireland, typically dating from the early medieval period, roughly 500 to 1000 AD, and understood to have served as a farmstead enclosure for a single family or small community. At Curraghnagarraha, the enclosed area measures approximately 48 metres on its north-west to south-east axis and 42 metres across the north-east to south-west, making it a reasonably substantial example. The interior is slightly dished, a subtle concavity that can sometimes indicate long occupation and the gradual accumulation and disturbance of the ground beneath. Around the north-west to north-east arc runs a round-bottomed fosse, a ditch that would originally have complemented a raised bank to form a defensive or demarcating boundary. The fosse here is relatively modest in depth, between 0.3 and 1.2 metres depending on the measurement point, and between 9 and 11 metres wide at the top, suggesting the bank it once supported has long since spread or been absorbed into the field system. A field bank now runs from south around to north-west, partially substituting for that original perimeter, and the entrance survives as a slight dip in the south-east edge, just 3 metres across, precisely where you would expect it: facing downslope, towards the more sheltered and workable ground below.