Ringfort (Rath), Ballylahy, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
On a north-west-facing hillside in County Galway, beneath the overgrowth of a working pasture, the outlines of a rath quietly persist.
A rath is an early medieval ringfort, typically a circular enclosure defined by an earthen bank and a surrounding ditch, known as a fosse, built to protect a farmstead and its inhabitants. They are among the most common archaeological monuments in Ireland, yet many, like this one at Ballylahy, survive in a condition that makes them easy to overlook entirely.
The enclosure here measures roughly 35 metres in diameter. The defining bank and external fosse are best preserved along the south-east arc, which offers the clearest sense of the original form, though the rest of the circuit is obscured by vegetation. More intriguing is what lies within: the south-east quadrant of the interior contains what may be a house site, a detail that hints at the domestic life once organised within these boundaries. Raths were generally occupied between the sixth and tenth centuries, functioning as enclosed farmsteads for free-farming families in early Irish society, and the possible house platform here places this site within that long, quiet tradition of everyday rural settlement.