Ringfort, Kilgarriff, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
Scattered across the Irish countryside in their thousands, ringforts are among the most common early medieval monuments in the country, yet individual examples have a way of slipping quietly out of the historical record.
The one at Kilgarriff, in County Galway, is a case in point. A ringfort, broadly speaking, is a roughly circular enclosure defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, built primarily as a defended farmstead during the early medieval period, roughly between 500 and 1000 AD. They were the homes of farming families rather than military garrisons, and the ditch and bank that surrounded them served as much to contain livestock and signal status as to repel attackers.
Kilgarriff sits in a part of Connacht where the land has retained the kind of quiet archaeology that more intensively farmed regions have lost. The townland name itself carries old roots; many Kilgarriff place names derive from the Irish coill gharbh, meaning rough or rugged wood, suggesting a landscape once characterised by scrubby, uneven woodland. Beyond the monument's presence in Kilgarriff townland and its classification as a ringfort, the specific details of this particular enclosure, its dimensions, condition, any finds associated with it, remain undocumented in what is publicly accessible at present.