Ringfort (Rath), Billis, Co. Cavan
Co. Cavan |
Ringforts
A modern road cuts straight through where the entrance to this early medieval enclosure once stood, and a sunken trackway bisects what remains of the interior.
That kind of layered intrusion, centuries of ordinary use eating quietly into something far older, is part of what makes this ringfort in Billis, County Cavan, worth pausing over. The site survives as a raised circular area with an internal diameter of about 28.5 metres, still enclosed by a substantial earthen bank and, beyond that, a wide and deep fosse, the term for the ditch that typically ran around the outside of such enclosures.
Ringforts, or raths, were the most common form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, built and used roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. They varied considerably in scale and elaboration, from modest single-banked enclosures surrounding a farmstead to large multivallate sites associated with higher-status households. The Billis example sits somewhere in the middle of that spectrum, its single bank and fosse representing the standard form. What distinguishes it now is the degree to which the surrounding landscape has worked against it. The fosse has been substantially infilled from the east-southeast and from the west-northwest, and the road from the southeast to south-southwest has replaced what may once have been the entrance, making it impossible to identify where people originally passed in and out. The original entrance is no longer recognisable, which is itself telling; many ringforts preserve clear causeways across the fosse, and their absence here speaks to how thoroughly the site has been absorbed into later patterns of movement and land use.