Ringfort (Rath), Lack, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Lack in County Clare, a rath sits in the landscape, its circular earthen banks marking out a space where someone, most likely a farming family of early medieval Ireland, once enclosed their home and livelihood.
Raths, also known as ringforts, are among the most common archaeological monument types in Ireland, with tens of thousands recorded across the country, yet each one represents a specific choice: a particular patch of ground, a particular community, a particular moment somewhere between the fifth and twelfth centuries. That commonness has a way of making individual examples easy to overlook, which is perhaps why so many survive at all, folded quietly into field boundaries and forgotten corners.
The detail specific to this site at Lack remains sparse for now, and what can be said with confidence is limited. What is known is that it has been recorded and classified as a rath, the earthwork variety of ringfort, distinguished by its raised bank and ditch rather than stone construction. Clare itself contains a considerable number of such monuments, reflecting the density of early medieval settlement across the region's varied terrain, from the limestone of the Burren to the lower-lying farmland further east and south. Lack as a place-name likely derives from the Irish leac, meaning a flagstone or flat slab, a small linguistic trace of how people once read and named the ground beneath their feet.
