Ringfort (Rath), Liskeevy, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
At Liskeevy in County Galway, a circular earthwork sits quietly in the landscape, its outline barely legible to anyone who does not know to look.
What survives is a denuded bank, roughly 26 metres in diameter, the remnant of a rath, a type of ringfort that would once have enclosed a farmstead or small settlement, typically dating from the early medieval period. The bank has been worn down to the point where the form is described as poorly preserved, which is a polite way of saying that centuries of farming, weather, and general indifference have reduced a once-substantial earthwork to little more than a low, grassy swell.
What makes the site quietly notable is its proximity to another ringfort, catalogued separately, which lies some 150 metres to the north-northeast. Paired or clustered ringforts are not unknown in the Irish midlands and west, and their grouping sometimes suggests related family units or successive phases of settlement on the same agricultural land. Whether that is the case here is not recorded, but the coincidence of two such sites within easy walking distance of each other at Liskeevy hints at a patch of ground that held some sustained significance during the early medieval centuries when these enclosures were in common use across Ireland.