Ringfort (Rath), Ballynahown, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Ringforts
At Ballynahown in County Wexford, there is a ringfort that most people will never see from the ground.
No earthwork rises above the fields, no bank catches the eye, and nothing in the surrounding landscape gives the site away. What reveals it instead is a cropmark, the faint differential staining that buried archaeological features leave on growing crops when seen from above, where soil disturbed by an ancient ditch retains moisture differently and causes the plants above it to ripen at a slightly different rate. In aerial photographs taken in 2004, this cropmark resolves into a circular enclosure roughly thirty metres in diameter, defined by a single fosse, the term used for the ditch that typically ringed a rath or ringfort in early medieval Ireland.
Ringforts were the dominant settlement form in early medieval Ireland, roughly the fifth to twelfth centuries, and many thousands survive across the country in various states of preservation. Most are visible as low earthen banks with an interior platform, but a significant number have been ploughed flat over the centuries, leaving only the buried ditch to mark where they once stood. This example sits at the crest of a shallow valley carved by a small east-west stream, a position that would have made practical sense to whoever chose the site, offering drainage, a modest elevation, and proximity to water without the exposure of a hilltop. The single fosse suggests a relatively modest enclosure, perhaps a farmstead rather than a high-status site, though without excavation it is impossible to say what the interior once held.
