Ringfort (Rath), Garryduff, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In the townland of Garryduff in County Mayo, a ringfort sits in the landscape, its earthen banks tracing the outline of a life lived roughly fourteen centuries ago.
These circular enclosures, known in Irish as raths, were the most common form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically comprising a raised earthen bank and external ditch enclosing a farmstead. Tens of thousands were built across the island, yet each one occupies a particular patch of ground for particular reasons, chosen by a particular family who understood the local drainage, the sight lines, the proximity to water.
The townland name Garryduff derives from the Irish, likely containing the element garraí, meaning a garden or enclosed plot, combined with dubh, meaning black or dark. Whether that refers to dark soil, a shaded enclosure, or something else entirely is difficult to say with certainty. What is clear is that the rath at Garryduff belongs to a wider pattern of early Christian period settlement across Connacht, where farming families enclosed their homesteads against cattle theft and the general uncertainties of the early medieval world. The bank of a rath was rarely a military fortification in any serious sense; it was a social boundary, a marker of property and household, as much symbolic as defensive.