Ringfort (Rath), Carrownakib, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
On a low hillock in the gently rolling grassland of Carrownakib in north County Galway, a ringfort sits in a state of considerable deterioration, its outline now barely readable in the landscape.
What survives is a subcircular enclosure measuring roughly 32 metres north to south, the kind of defended farmstead that was once among the most common settlement forms across early medieval Ireland, built and occupied broadly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Here, though, the earthworks have been worn down to little more than suggestion, a denuded bank tracing an arc from the north-west through north to north-east, and a scarp completing the circuit on the southern side. Farm field walls, added at some later and unrecorded point, cut across the enclosing elements at both east and west, partly absorbing the ancient boundary into the working agricultural fabric of the land.
What makes the site quietly interesting, despite its poor state of preservation, is the probable presence of a souterrain beneath the interior. A souterrain is an underground stone-lined passage or chamber, typically associated with early medieval raths, and thought to have served as a place of refuge, storage, or both. The entrance and extent of this one have not been fully established, which is not unusual; many souterrains across Ireland remain only partially explored or identified. The rath itself follows the standard pattern of a single-enclosure farmstead, home in its working life to a family of some modest status, the earthen bank and internal ditch once forming a meaningful barrier against cattle raiders and opportunistic threat rather than organised military assault.