Ringfort (Rath), Sonnagh, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In the pastureland of Sonnagh in County Mayo, a low circular earthwork sits tucked against the slope of a natural rise, a hill looming over it to the north.
It does not announce itself. The bank is modest, barely rising above the interior ground level on its inner face, yet the outer scarp is well defined, dropping away cleanly at between 1.2 and 1.4 metres. That asymmetry is part of what makes a rath, as this type of ringfort is sometimes called, worth reading carefully. The bank was not simply piled up for show; it was shaped to present a clear face outward, a boundary that meant something.
Ringforts are among the most common archaeological monument types in Ireland, with tens of thousands recorded across the island. Most date to the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to twelfth centuries, and functioned as enclosed farmsteads, the earthen or stone bank marking the boundary of a family's domestic space and livestock enclosure. This particular example at Sonnagh is roughly circular, measuring about 22 metres across on its northeast to southwest axis, with a bank that widens from around 2.8 metres at the northeast to 4 metres at the southwest. On the eastern to southeastern side, the exterior face of the bank has slumped more noticeably than elsewhere, and this degradation may well indicate where the original entrance once broke the circuit. Such entrances typically faced east or southeast, a pattern seen repeatedly across the country. Just inside, beneath the canopy of thorn bushes and brambles that now make the interior largely inaccessible, there appears to be a slight rise in ground level north of centre, possibly the remains of a structure or accumulated occupation debris. In the surrounding field, faint traces of cultivation ridges are still visible, a quiet sign that the land around the fort was worked long after whoever built it was gone.