Ringfort (Rath), Aghavaddy, Co. Cavan
Co. Cavan |
Ringforts
In a field in Aghavaddy, County Cavan, a raised circular platform sits enclosed by an earthen bank roughly 38 metres across its interior.
These are the remains of a rath, the most common type of early medieval settlement in Ireland, typically built between around 500 and 1000 AD. A rath is essentially a farmstead enclosed by one or more banks of earth, sometimes accompanied by a ditch, designed to define territory and provide a degree of security for people and livestock. What makes the Aghavaddy example quietly interesting is not just its form but a detail recovered from the soil: iron slag, discovered in the early 1980s through local information.
Iron slag is the glassy, dense residue left behind when iron ore is smelted or worked at high temperature. Its presence here suggests that someone was engaged in metalworking within or close to the enclosure, which would have been no small matter in early medieval Ireland. Smithing was a specialised craft, and the smith occupied an important social position in Gaelic society, sometimes associated with particular legal rights and protections. A rath with evidence of ironworking is not unique in Ireland, but it adds a layer of economic and social complexity to what might otherwise appear to be a modest earthwork in a Cavan field. The break in the bank on the south-eastern side may mark where the original entrance once stood, a common orientation in Irish raths, though the reasoning behind entrance placement remains debated among archaeologists.