Ringfort (Rath), Cross, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
Near the small townland of Cross in County Clare, there sits a ringfort, known in Irish as a rath, a type of circular earthwork enclosure that was the most common form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland.
Tens of thousands of these structures survive across the island in various states of preservation, yet each one represents the domestic life of a farming family, a local chieftain, or a minor lord who once lived within its raised earthen banks and timber palisades. That so many remain visible in the landscape at all, centuries after their abandonment, is largely a matter of practical agriculture and, in some cases, of superstition: raths were long associated with the fairy mounds of Irish folklore, and many a farmer thought twice before putting a plough to one.
The ringfort at Cross is one of countless such monuments catalogued across Clare, a county whose geology and land use have preserved an unusual density of early medieval remains. Without more detailed survey information currently available for this particular site, the specifics of its dimensions, condition, and any associated finds remain undocumented in the public record. What can be said is that ringforts of this type typically date to between the sixth and tenth centuries, and that their earthen banks, sometimes accompanied by an external ditch, defined a domestic space that might have housed a single family along with their animals and stores. Some examples in Clare also show evidence of souterrains, which are stone-lined underground passages thought to have served as cool storage areas or places of refuge.