Ringfort (Rath), Boleyboy, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In the townland of Boleyboy in County Mayo, a rath sits in the landscape doing what raths have done for well over a thousand years: quietly persisting.
A rath, or ringfort, is a roughly circular enclosure defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, and represents one of the most common surviving monument types in Ireland. There are tens of thousands of them across the country, yet each one marks the site of an early medieval farmstead, a place where a family once lived, kept livestock, and organised their world within a raised perimeter that offered both a degree of physical protection and a visible statement of social standing.
The place name Boleyboy offers a small clue to the character of the land. The element "boley" derives from the Irish "buaile", a seasonal pasture or milking place where cattle were brought during summer months, a practice known as transhumance that shaped the rhythms of rural life in Ireland well into the post-medieval period. The "boy" element likely reflects the Irish "buidhe", meaning yellow, perhaps a reference to the colour of the vegetation or the quality of the ground. That a ringfort should occupy this kind of terrain is unsurprising. Early medieval farmers chose elevated or well-drained ground for their enclosures, and the townlands of Mayo, with their mix of bog, pasture, and rocky outcrops, preserve a significant number of such sites in varying states of survival.