Ringfort (Cashel), Knappagh More, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In a townland called Knappagh More, on the Atlantic fringe of County Mayo, there sits a cashel: a ringfort built not from earthen banks and ditches, as was common across much of Ireland, but from dry-stone walling.
That distinction matters. Where an earthwork ringfort might soften and blur over centuries, slumping back into the landscape, a cashel holds its shape with more stubbornness, its stones still roughly where early medieval hands placed them. These structures were the farmsteads of Gaelic Ireland, typically dating from somewhere between the sixth and twelfth centuries, enclosing a family's dwelling and outbuildings within a circular wall that offered both a degree of protection and a clear declaration of settled territory.
The cashel at Knappagh More sits in a part of Mayo that has never been short of prehistory. The broader region is scattered with field systems, burial monuments, and enclosures that speak to long and layered occupation of what is now a relatively sparse landscape. A cashel in this context is not unusual in type, but each one represents a specific household, a particular choice of ground, a family's relationship with the land around them. The name Knappagh itself likely derives from the Irish "cnapach", meaning a lumpy or hummocky place, which gives some sense of the terrain these builders were working with.
