Ringfort (Rath), Carrowcanada, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
On a ridge in County Mayo, a roughly circular enclosure sits quietly in pasture, its low stony scarps more legible to a careful eye than to a passing one.
This is a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, the type of enclosed farmstead that was built and occupied across Ireland primarily during the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Thousands survive in various states across the country, but this one in Carrowcanada carries a few details worth pausing over.
The enclosure measures approximately 33.8 metres east to west and 34.7 metres north to south, defined by a stony scarp that reaches about a metre in external height at its best-preserved points. That preservation is uneven: sections to the north-east and south have been disturbed or partly levelled, and a stretch to the north-west has been quarried away entirely, a fate common to field monuments that sat conveniently close to a need for building stone. Where the scarp survives more completely, between the south-south-east and south-west, it forms a recognisable stone bank roughly 2.7 metres wide, and a narrow inner stony rise sits just inside it, separated by a gap of 1.7 metres. The interior rises slightly toward the centre and north, giving the whole enclosure a gently domed profile when viewed from outside. A faint mossy line running roughly north-west to south-east through the interior may be the ghost of an old field boundary or internal division. More intriguing are the interconnected irregular hollows in the northern half of the interior, which may point to a collapsed souterrain beneath the surface. A souterrain is an underground stone-lined passage or chamber, typically associated with early medieval settlements, used variously for storage, refuge, or both. The ridge also carries additional company: a cairn sits 35 metres to the north-east, and a second rath lies 200 metres to the south-east, suggesting this was not an isolated holding but part of a broader pattern of early settlement across this stretch of Mayo grassland.