Ringfort (Rath), Carrowkeel, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Ringforts
On the edge of a ridge in County Sligo, where flat and gently rolling pasture gives way to open air, a circular earthwork sits quietly orienting itself towards three of the county's most distinctive landmarks: Lough Gill, the Ox Mountains, and the great hill of Knocknarea.
That positioning is unlikely to be coincidental. Ringforts, known in Irish as raths, were the most common form of enclosed settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically built between the sixth and tenth centuries. They served as farmsteads for a single family or kin group, their banks and ditches defining both a physical and a social boundary. This one at Carrowkeel commands its ridge with a confidence that suggests the view was as much a consideration as the defence.
The earthwork itself is well preserved and neatly proportioned. A circular interior, roughly twenty-nine metres across, is enclosed by a bank nearly six metres wide and rising to one and a half metres in height. Beyond that bank runs an external ditch, four metres across and just over a metre deep, which would have made the enclosed space considerably more imposing to approach on foot. The entrance, positioned to the north-west, is a little under three metres wide, and a causeway survives across the ditch at that point, giving the original occupants a defined and deliberate way in and out. The causeway detail is a reminder that these structures were not simply piled-up earth; they were engineered spaces, with considered thresholds.