Ringfort (Rath), Ballynakill, Co. Sligo
Co. Sligo |
Ringforts
On a ridge top in Ballynakill, a low circular earthwork sits in rough grazing land, its outline still legible after well over a thousand years.
What gives it away is the rushes: a dense growth of the wetland plant traces the line of an external fosse, the shallow defensive ditch that once ran around the outside of the enclosure, marking in vegetation what the ground alone no longer makes obvious. The bank itself survives on the south-east to north-north-east arc, rising about 1.2 metres on its outer face and a more modest 0.6 metres internally, with a width of around 3.5 metres. Elsewhere, the earthwork has been cut away by field boundaries, the ordinary geometry of later farming quietly erasing what earlier occupation put there.
This is a rath, the most common type of enclosed settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically dating from roughly the sixth to the twelfth century. Raths were usually the farmsteads of a single family or household, their earthen banks and ditches less about serious military defence than about defining a social boundary, keeping livestock in and marking status within the community. The Ballynakill example measures 24 metres across its north-south axis, which places it within the typical range for such sites. Its position on a ridge summit is characteristic too: elevated ground offered visibility, drainage, and a degree of natural advantage that early farming families consistently favoured. The fosse here is shallow, only around 0.2 metres deep as currently surveyed, and the interior is densely overgrown, but the essential shape of the place persists.