Ringfort, Eglish, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
A south-facing slope in grassland near Eglish in County Galway holds the faint outline of a circular rath, a type of enclosed farmstead used throughout early medieval Ireland, typically dating from around the fifth to the twelfth century.
What makes this one quietly interesting is precisely how little of it remains legible. The enclosure measures roughly 37 metres in diameter, and only the southeastern to southwestern arc survives as a low earthen bank; the rest has been reduced to a scarp, a gentle slope in the ground where the original boundary once stood more prominently.
Raths of this kind were once among the most common man-made features in the Irish landscape, numbering in the tens of thousands, and they served as the enclosed homesteads of farming families rather than as military fortifications, despite the word "fort" in their common name. This example at Eglish has not fared well over the centuries. The surviving bank is broken by several modern gaps, suggesting agricultural activity has gradually worn the structure down. No specific historical events or named occupants are recorded for this site, and it does not appear to have any surviving internal features visible above ground.