Ringfort (Rath), Newtown, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
Beneath the trees and dumped field-clearance rubble on a gentle rise in County Galway, there is a ringfort that most people walking past would not recognise as anything at all.
The earthwork, a subcircular rath measuring roughly 35 metres north to south and 28 metres east to west, has been so thoroughly colonised by scrub and obscured by generations of cleared stone that its defining bank is barely legible as a human-made feature. That process of gradual erasure is itself part of what makes it worth pausing over.
Raths are among the most common monuments in the Irish landscape, with tens of thousands once scattered across the country. They were typically enclosed farmsteads, the homes of farming families during the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to the twelfth centuries. A bank of earth, sometimes accompanied by a ditch, defined a roughly circular area within which a family would have kept their dwelling and livestock. This particular example in Newtown, Co. Galway sits on a slight rise in undulating pastureland, which is a typical choice of location, offering modest drainage and visibility. At 35 metres across its longer axis, it falls within the ordinary size range for such enclosures. What has been less ordinary is its fate since those early centuries: the bank has been used as a convenient dumping ground for rubble cleared from surrounding fields, a common enough indignity for earthworks in agricultural landscapes, but one that has left this rath in a particularly poor state of preservation.
