Ringfort (Rath), Corragarry, Co. Cavan
Co. Cavan |
Ringforts
A raised oval platform sits in the farmland of Corragarry in County Cavan, its outline still legible after well over a thousand years.
This is a rath, the most common type of early medieval settlement monument in Ireland, consisting of a circular or oval enclosure defined by an earthen bank and a fosse, the fosse being a ditch dug to provide the material for the bank itself. Most raths date to somewhere between the sixth and tenth centuries and functioned as enclosed farmsteads, home to a single family and their livestock. What makes this particular example worth pausing over is how intact the essential structure remains, the bank substantial enough to read clearly in the landscape, the fosse wide and shallow around it.
The internal dimensions run roughly 44 metres east to west and 32 metres north to south, giving the enclosed area a distinctly oval rather than circular plan. The original entrance survives as a deliberate break in the bank on the south-eastern side, accompanied by a causeway crossing the fosse, a detail that tells you something about how the site was used and approached daily by its occupants. A modern field boundary now encircles the monument and cuts across the outer edge of that causeway, a reminder of how continuously this land has been divided and worked, with earlier boundaries quietly absorbed into later ones.