Ringfort (Rath), Creegh, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Creegh, in County Clare, a circular earthwork sits in the landscape doing what ringforts have done for well over a thousand years: outlasting almost everything built around it.
These enclosures, known in Irish as raths, were the standard farmstead of early medieval Ireland, typically consisting of a raised circular area enclosed by one or more earthen banks and ditches. They were not military forts in any dramatic sense, but working farmsteads, the homes of farming families who constructed them between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries. Ireland still has tens of thousands of them, and yet each one occupies a specific patch of ground chosen by a specific household, for reasons of drainage, visibility, or proximity to good land.
Creegh itself is a small rural townland in west Clare, in a part of the county that sits between the Shannon estuary to the south and the broader limestone plain stretching northward. The area was settled continuously through the early medieval period, and the presence of a rath here fits a pattern common across the region, where such enclosures are often the oldest surviving trace of organised human habitation in an otherwise unremarkable field. Without more detailed recorded information currently available for this particular site, the specifics of its size, condition, and any associated features remain undocumented in accessible form.