Ringfort (Rath), Cabragh, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Ringforts
There is a particular kind of landscape feature that reads, at first glance, as almost nothing: a slight rise in a field, a gentle thickening of the ground that might be a natural undulation or the remnant of an old wall.
The rath at Cabragh, in County Sligo, is exactly this kind of place. A raised circular area roughly 21 metres across, enclosed by a low bank of earth and stone just half a metre high and about three metres wide, it sits on a gentle south-facing slope not far from the Leaffony River. The northern and eastern sections of the bank have been largely levelled, most likely through centuries of agricultural activity, and the original entrance is no longer recognisable. What remains is the faint outline of an enclosure that was once a functioning part of an early Irish farming landscape.
Raths, also called ringforts, were the most common form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically dating from around the sixth to the twelfth century. They served as enclosed farmsteads, the earthen bank offering a degree of protection for a family and their livestock against animal predators and rival neighbours rather than any serious military threat. The interior of the Cabragh example contains a low central mound, which is thought to be composed of field clearance debris, the accumulated result of stones being gathered and piled from the surrounding ground over many generations of working the land. It is a detail that quietly collapses the distance between the people who built the rath and those who farmed around and eventually over it, each leaving their mark on the same modest patch of ground.