Barrow (Ring Barrow), Ranahinch, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Barrows
At Ranahinch in County Westmeath, a small earthwork once occupied a gentle rise in the landscape.
It has since vanished entirely, leaving no surface trace, yet the story of how it has been interpreted and misidentified over nearly two centuries makes it quietly interesting as an example of how the past gets catalogued, and occasionally miscatalogued.
When the Ordnance Survey mapped the area in 1837, the feature was recorded on the Fair Plan map with the annotation 'fort', and the accompanying six-inch map depicted it as a small circular earthwork or enclosure, roughly twelve metres in diameter. That label stuck for a long time, placing it in the broad category of ringforts, the circular enclosed farmsteads that dot the Irish countryside in their thousands and date mainly from the early medieval period. But the enclosure's size complicates that reading. Ringforts are generally larger; a diameter of twelve metres is modest even by the standards of smaller examples. This has led to the suggestion that the feature was more likely a ring-barrow, a type of prehistoric funerary monument in which a low mound is surrounded by a circular ditch or bank, often constructed during the Bronze Age as a marker for the dead. The distinction matters: a ringfort is a dwelling, a ring-barrow a burial monument, and the two belong to entirely different periods and purposes. The site sits on a slight natural rise, which would be consistent with either interpretation, though such elevated positions were particularly favoured for burial monuments intended to be seen across open ground. Whatever its original function, the earthwork has been levelled, and nothing now remains above the surface.
