Ringfort (Cashel), Cappagh Beg, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Cappagh Beg, in County Clare, there sits a cashel: a ringfort built not from earthen banks but from dry-stone walling, a construction technique that speaks to the geology and the resourcefulness of early medieval Ireland.
Cashels of this kind were typically built between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries, serving as enclosed farmsteads for a single family or small kin group. The circular wall, often several feet thick, defined a domestic world, enclosing a house, animals, and whatever small stores a rural household depended upon. Thousands of ringforts survive across Ireland in varying states of preservation, and yet each one represents a particular patch of land that someone, at some point, considered worth defending and calling home.
The cashel at Cappagh Beg sits within a part of Clare where the underlying limestone of the Burren fringe makes dry-stone construction a natural choice, the raw material lying close to hand in the fields and pavements all around. The townland name itself, Cappagh, derives from the Irish ceapach, meaning a tillage plot or garden plot, suggesting a long association between this landscape and cultivation. Beyond that, the documentary record for this specific monument is presently thin, and the physical evidence on the ground holds its details quietly, as these sites so often do.