Ringfort (Rath), Ballintleva, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In the townland of Ballintleva in County Mayo, a ringfort sits in the landscape, largely unannounced.
Known in Irish as a rath, a ringfort is an enclosed farmstead of the early medieval period, typically dating from around the fifth to the twelfth century. These circular enclosures, defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, were the basic unit of rural settlement across Ireland for centuries, and thousands of them survive in varying states of preservation. Ballintleva's example is one of that quiet majority: recorded, mapped, and classified, but not yet widely written about.
Ringforts were the homes of farming families and their livestock, the banks serving as much for status and boundary definition as for defence. The word rath specifically refers to an earthwork enclosure, as distinct from a cashel, which is the stone equivalent more common in the west of Ireland. Given that Ballintleva sits in Mayo, a county where the Atlantic edge meets drumlin country and bog, the presence of an earthwork rather than a stone enclosure is itself a small detail worth noting. Without more particular records currently available for this site, the broader pattern of early medieval settlement in Connacht provides the closest context: these were working farmsteads, likely occupied for generations, and the faint circular outline they leave on the ground today is often the only evidence that a family's entire world once turned within that ring.