Ringfort (Rath), Tooreen, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Tooreen in County Clare, a ringfort sits quietly in the landscape, its earthen banks still holding their shape after more than a thousand years.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths, were the most common form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically consisting of a circular area enclosed by one or more earthen banks and ditches. They served as farmsteads, sheltering a family and their livestock, and tens of thousands of them once dotted the island. The fact that so many survive at all, including this one in Tooreen, owes much to the deep-rooted folk belief that they were inhabited by supernatural forces, which discouraged generations of farmers from levelling them.
Clare is particularly rich in these monuments, its limestone landscape preserving an unusual density of early medieval remains. The rath at Tooreen belongs to this broader pattern of settlement that took hold across Ireland roughly between the sixth and tenth centuries, when the island was organised into a patchwork of small kingdoms and cattle-owning farming households. The earthworks of a rath were a statement of status as much as a practical enclosure, and the interior would typically have contained a timber or wattle house, storage pits, and sometimes a souterrain, an underground stone-lined passage used for storage or refuge. Whether any such features survive beneath the surface at Tooreen is not currently recorded in available sources.
Very little specific detail about this particular site has been documented in accessible records at present, which makes Tooreen a good example of just how many of Ireland's early medieval monuments remain incompletely catalogued. The ringfort endures, even if the paperwork has not quite caught up with it.