Ringfort (Rath), Cummer, Co. Wexford
Co. Wexford |
Ringforts
A low earthen ring sitting quietly in rough pasture, this rath at Cummer is easy to walk past without fully registering what you are looking at.
But that modest profile, a circular bank barely a metre or two above the surrounding ground, is precisely the point. It was never meant to be a fortress in the military sense. A rath is a ringfort, the most common type of early medieval settlement monument in Ireland, typically enclosing the homestead of a farming family of some local standing, somewhere between the 6th and 10th centuries. The bank defined a boundary, provided a degree of protection for livestock, and marked out who belonged inside from everything beyond.
This particular example measures 25.5 metres in diameter, defined by an earthen bank two to three metres wide, with an external fosse, a flat-bottomed ditch dug to supply the material for the bank itself, running around the northern, eastern, and southern sides. Where the fosse stops, a natural stream takes over the same boundary-marking role. The entrance, three metres wide, opens to the south, a common orientation that favoured shelter from northerly wind and morning light. The headwaters of the River Lask lie roughly 130 metres to the west, a reminder that whoever chose this site was thinking practically, close enough to water, but on a gentle south-facing slope that would have drained well and caught the sun.