Ringfort (Rath), Brownstown, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Ringforts
On the southern face of a natural slope in County Westmeath, an oval earthwork sits quietly in the middle of undulating pasture, its banks still rising to a height of two metres in places.
This is a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, the most common surviving monument type in the Irish landscape. Ringforts were enclosed farmsteads, typically built between the early medieval period and around the twelfth century, and though tens of thousands once existed across the country, many have been levelled by centuries of agriculture. This one has fared considerably better than most.
The enclosure is notably elongated for its type, measuring roughly 49 metres north to south and 24.2 metres east to west, giving it a distinctly oval rather than circular plan. A bank of earth and stone traces its perimeter, and at the northern edge there are slight traces of an external fosse, a defensive ditch that would originally have reinforced the barrier presented by the bank. Two possible entrance gaps survive: one at the west-northwest, approximately 2.1 metres wide, and a narrower one at the north, around 1.8 metres across. The interior itself is not flat but slopes gently from north to south, following the natural contour of the hillside on which it was built. That positioning was no accident. The site commands extensive views to the north, east, and south, offering the kind of visual reach over the surrounding land that early medieval farmers and their communities would have valued for both practical and social reasons.
