Ringfort (Cashel), Ballynacourty, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
In the townland of Ballynacourty in County Galway, there sits a cashel, a type of ringfort built from dry-stone walling rather than earthen banks.
Where the more familiar earthen ringforts were shaped from the soil of their surroundings, cashels were constructed wherever stone lay close to the surface, their circular enclosures rising from the landscape as compact, enduring walls. This one belongs to a category of monument that was once extraordinarily common across Ireland; ringforts of various kinds number in the tens of thousands, the everyday farmsteads of early medieval Ireland, occupied roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. That so many survive at all, even in partial form, is largely because of a long-held folk belief that disturbing them invites misfortune.
Ballynacourty itself is a small and quietly unremarkable townland, which is part of what makes the presence of such a structure worth pausing over. The cashel here represents a moment of settlement, a family or small community who chose this particular patch of Galway ground, gathered the local stone, and built themselves a defended enclosure within which they would have kept livestock overnight and sheltered their household. The word cashel derives from the Irish caiseal, itself borrowed from the Latin castellum, a small fort, which gives some sense of how these structures were perceived, not merely as farm boundaries but as places of protection and order in an uncertain world. Beyond its classification and location, the detailed history of this particular site remains to be fully documented.
