Ringfort (Rath), Ballytrent, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Ringforts
This particular enclosure near Ballytrent in County Wexford is, in a literal sense, almost invisible.
It does not announce itself on the ground with earthworks or standing stones. Instead, it reveals itself from above, as a cropmark, the faint differential in vegetation growth that betrays a buried archaeological feature to aerial cameras when conditions are right. What the photographs show is a roughly subrectangular enclosure, approximately 50 metres across its longer axis and 40 metres on the shorter, defined by a wide fosse, that is, a ditch, running around its perimeter at somewhere between three and five metres in width. It sits on a south-east-facing slope, the kind of orientation that would have made practical sense to an early medieval farming household seeking shelter from prevailing winds and a degree of morning light.
A rath is the Irish term for a ringfort, the most common type of early medieval settlement monument in the country, typically formed by one or more earthen banks enclosing a circular or near-circular domestic space. This one at Ballytrent is unusual in being subrectangular rather than the more typical rounded form. What makes the wider landscape here particularly interesting is the density of related monuments in the immediate area. Another rath lies roughly 170 metres to the north-east, and approximately 450 metres to the west-south-west sits a large double-banked ceremonial enclosure, a monument type associated not with domestic settlement but with ritual or assembly activity. The proximity of these three sites to one another suggests that this corner of south Wexford was a place of some significance during the early medieval period, perhaps a locality where habitation, land use, and ceremony overlapped in ways that are now only partially recoverable.