Ringfort (Rath), Carrowkeel, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
Near the summit of a hill in the undulating grassland of Carrowkeel, a well-preserved ringfort sits in quiet isolation, its circular form still legible after more than a millennium.
A ringfort, or rath, is an enclosed farmstead of the early medieval period, typically dated between the fifth and twelfth centuries, defined by an earthen bank and, in many cases, a surrounding ditch. This example is subcircular in plan, measuring roughly 35 metres east to west and 32 metres north to south, with both the bank and the external fosse, the ditch that runs around the outside, remaining in sufficiently good condition to read the original shape without much imaginative effort.
A probable entrance faces the east-north-east, the orientation that many ringforts share, possibly for practical reasons related to morning light or prevailing winds, though the precise logic is not always clear. Just outside the fosse at the south-south-east, a small quarry sits close to the monument, its relationship to the fort uncertain but intriguing. Stone from such a feature could plausibly have been used in construction or repair, though no firm connection is recorded. What is recorded, by Neary as early as 1914, is that another ringfort of comparable type lies roughly 500 metres to the east, suggesting this was not an isolated farmstead in an empty landscape but part of a broader pattern of early settlement across this part of north Galway. Two such enclosures within visible distance of one another hints at a community rather than a solitary household, neighbours separated by fields that have long since lost whatever boundaries once divided them.