Ringfort (Rath), Marlfield, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Ringforts
On the break of an east-facing slope in undulating pasture at Marlfield, County Tipperary, a low circular earthwork sits quietly in the landscape, its original purpose largely legible only to those who know what to look for.
This is a rath, a type of ringfort common across early medieval Ireland, typically dating from roughly the fifth to the twelfth century. Raths were enclosed farmsteads, their earthen banks and ditches defining a domestic space that might have held a family home, animal pens, and storage. This one is almost perfectly circular, measuring thirty-eight metres north to south and thirty-nine metres east to west, which puts it well within the typical range for such enclosures.
What the centuries have left behind is a denuded bank of earth and stone, worn down in most places to a simple scarp, meaning a slope or step in the ground rather than a standing wall. On the western side the bank has been reduced to as little than half a metre in height, while on the eastern, downslope side it rises to just over a metre, a difference that reflects both the natural gradient of the hill and the uneven pace of erosion and disturbance. There is no surviving evidence of an external fosse, the ditch that would typically have been dug outside the bank to reinforce the enclosure, though this absence does not necessarily mean one never existed. The western sector, where the bank is most eroded, may once have held the entrance. Limited quarrying has taken place at the base of the bank in the south-west quadrant, and a quarry pit lies immediately east of the monument, both of which have contributed to the degraded condition of the site. A field boundary runs north to south just west of the western bank, and the townland boundary cuts across to the north, so the ringfort has gradually found itself stitched into layers of later land division that long post-date its construction.