Ringfort (Rath), Carrowreagh, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
Scattered across the Irish landscape in their thousands, ringforts are among the most common archaeological monuments on the island, yet individually they are frequently overlooked.
The one at Carrowreagh in County Mayo is a rath, the term used for a ringfort constructed primarily from earthworks rather than stone. A rath typically consists of one or more circular banks and ditches enclosing a central area that would once have served as a farmstead, a place of habitation and security during the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. That so many survive at all is largely due to a deep-rooted folk belief that disturbing a fairy fort, as ringforts came to be known in later centuries, would bring misfortune. This superstition, more than any formal protection, kept countless examples intact through centuries of agricultural change.
The place name Carrowreagh derives from the Irish an cheathrú riabhach, meaning the grey or brindled quarter, a reference to the land division system once used across Connacht. Quarter land of this kind was a standard unit of Gaelic land tenure, and the grey descriptor likely reflects the character of the terrain, perhaps thin or rough upland soil. Mayo as a whole retains a high density of early medieval settlement remains, a reflection of the fact that much of the land was never subjected to the intensive agricultural reorganisation that stripped similar features from more fertile lowland areas elsewhere in Ireland. The Carrowreagh rath sits within that broader pattern of survival, a modest circular earthwork in a county where such things still punctuate the fields with quiet regularity.