Ringfort (Rath), Esker, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
Three ringforts within 200 metres of each other is unusual enough to pause over.
On a flat, open stretch of pasture in Esker, Co. Mayo, one of those three survives in partial but readable form, a slightly raised oval of ground sitting quietly among fields, its defensive geometry still legible if you know what to look for. The concentration suggests this was once a settled, socially organised landscape, rather than isolated farmsteads scattered across empty terrain.
A rath is an early medieval enclosed settlement, typically dating from roughly the sixth to the twelfth century, consisting of a circular or oval area defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches. This particular example is oval, measuring approximately 39 metres along its longer east-west axis and 27 metres across. It is defined by a low scarp, a slight drop in the ground surface, and enclosed beyond that by two fosses, the term for the ditches dug as part of the defensive circuit, with an earthen bank between them. The eastern half of the rath has been levelled, probably by agricultural activity over the centuries, but the western arc is considerably better preserved. The outer bank there still rises to about 0.85 metres on its exterior face, and a gap of roughly 2.5 metres in the bank, aligned with a causeway across the outermost fosse, points to where the original entrance likely stood. To the north, an esker, a long ridge of gravel and sand deposited by glacial meltwater, rises some 200 metres away, and a second rath sits on top of it. A third lies 170 metres to the south-west, with a stream or drain running just three metres south of the rath under discussion, marking a subtle boundary in the landscape.