Ringfort (Rath), Balreagh, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Ringforts
A low ring of earth and stone sits on a gentle rise in the grasslands of Balreagh, County Westmeath, easy to overlook and yet old enough to have shaped the land around it for well over a millennium.
What makes it quietly arresting is not its scale but its completeness: the enclosing bank survives, the external fosse, a defensive ditch dug around the outside of the structure, remains wide and deep in places, and a narrow entrance gap, just 3.4 metres across, still opens to the east-northeast, exactly where an early medieval farmer or minor chieftain would have positioned it.
The monument is sub-circular in plan, measuring roughly 33 metres north to south and 31 metres east to west. A ringfort, sometimes called a rath, is a form of enclosed farmstead typical of early medieval Ireland, generally dated between the fifth and twelfth centuries. They were built in their thousands across the country, serving as protected homesteads for farming families, the bank and fosse providing a modest but meaningful barrier against cattle raiders and wolves alike. This example in Balreagh sits on a slight natural rise in gently undulating grassland, a position that would have offered its inhabitants reasonable sightlines to the northwest. The fosse is best preserved at the southeast and northwest, where the earthworks retain something of their original depth and width. The interior slopes slightly to the northwest, and several shallow depressions visible there are thought to be of relatively recent origin rather than the remains of ancient structures. A second ringfort lies approximately 160 metres to the south-southeast, suggesting this was once a more densely settled corner of the midlands than the quiet fields now imply.