Ringfort (Cashel), Cloonnagashel, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In a field of good pasture in Cloonnagashel, Co. Mayo, a roughly circular enclosure sits in plain sight, its collapsed stone wall barely rising above the grass.
It is easy to mistake for a natural rise in the ground or a fallen field boundary, yet the dimensions tell a different story: roughly 58 metres north to south and 62 metres east to west, with a wall that was once substantial enough to register at over two metres wide, even if it now stands no higher than 0.6 metres along the surviving western to southern arc.
This is a cashel, a term used for a ringfort built from stone rather than earthen banks. Ringforts, which date broadly from the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to the twelfth centuries, were the enclosed farmsteads of a rural Irish society organised around cattle farming and kinship. The cashel form is particularly associated with the west of Ireland, where stone was the readiest building material to hand. The Cloonnagashel example is catalogued in D. Lavelle's archaeological survey of the Ballinrobe district, including the Lough Mask and Lough Carra area, published in 1994, which places it among the wider scatter of such monuments across this quietly archaeology-rich corner of Mayo. The interior, by that account, was heavily overgrown, a condition that tends to preserve what lies beneath while making surface observation difficult.
