Ringfort (Rath), Drumharriff, Co. Donegal
On the southwest slope of a low hill overlooking Lough Erne sits what early Ordnance Survey mapmakers simply marked as 'Fort'.
Ringfort (Rath), Drumharriff, Co. Donegal
Today, visitors to Drumharriff in County Donegal will find only subtle clues to its ancient past; a slightly raised area of ground and the faint traces of a defensive ditch, or fosse, along its northern and western sides. These modest earthworks are all that remain of what was once a ringfort, one of thousands that dotted the Irish landscape during the early medieval period.
Ringforts, known locally as raths, were the farmsteads of prosperous families between roughly 500 and 1200 CE. The Drumharriff example would have consisted of a circular enclosure defined by an earthen bank and external ditch, providing both security and status to its inhabitants. The choice of location was strategic; positioned on elevated ground with views south towards Lough Erne, the fort’s occupants could monitor the surrounding landscape whilst benefiting from natural drainage on the hillside.
Though time and agriculture have reduced this particular fort to mere shadows in the earth, its inclusion on the earliest Ordnance Survey maps of the 1830s and 1840s speaks to its significance in local memory. The site forms part of Donegal’s rich archaeological heritage, documented comprehensively in the 1983 Archaeological Survey of County Donegal, which catalogued field antiquities spanning from the Mesolithic period through to the 17th century.





