Ringfort (Rath), Borrisnafarney, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Ringforts
On the west-facing slope of a natural hillock in the uplands of north Tipperary, an oval earthwork sits quietly in the landscape, its northern bank still rising to a height of three metres above the surrounding ground.
This is a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, the most common monument type in the Irish countryside. Thousands were built across the island, mostly during the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to twelfth centuries, serving as enclosed farmsteads for families of modest means or local standing. What makes this one worth pausing over is how deliberately it works with its setting rather than against it.
The enclosure measures 34 metres north to south and 27 metres east to west, enclosed by an earth and stone bank two metres wide and an outer fosse, a defensive ditch, of similar width. The entrance gap, four metres across, faces east. At the western side, where the fosse is no longer clearly visible, the builders had a ready substitute: the hillside itself drops away steeply, providing a natural defensive edge that made an artificial ditch unnecessary. This kind of practical economy, using topography to do the work that labour might otherwise supply, is characteristic of early Irish enclosure building, but it is satisfying to see it so legibly preserved here. A second ringfort lies to the north-east, which raises the possibility that the two sites were occupied by neighbouring or related households farming the same upland ground, a pattern documented elsewhere in early medieval Ireland where ringforts appear in loose clusters across shared territory.


