Ringfort (Rath), Kilbride, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
On the eastern edge of Swinford, a small oval enclosure sits on a ridgeline in open pasture, its original form quietly dismantled from several directions at once.
One side has been quarried away, another incorporated into a modern field boundary and faced with stone, a third reduced to little more than a scarp. What remains is enough to trace the shape of a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, which was typically a farmstead enclosed by one or more earthen banks, home to a family of some standing during the early medieval period, roughly between 500 and 1000 AD.
The enclosure measures approximately 33 metres across its longer axis and around 25 metres on the shorter, giving it a slightly oval rather than circular plan. Where the original stony earthen bank survives best, along the southern side, it stands about 0.9 metres high on the exterior. At the north-east, it has been worn down to a scarp that is actually taller at 1.5 metres, suggesting the ground falls away sharply there. Stones protrude through the turf along the top of the bank, and three larger stones edge the inner face of the scarp at the north-east corner. Field fences have grown up around and into the monument over time, clipping its western edge, skirting its northern scarp in a shallow arc, and abutting it at the north-east, so that what was once a self-contained enclosure is now partially absorbed into the working geometry of the surrounding farmland. Hawthorn and gorse ring the interior perimeter, and the enclosed area itself remains grass-covered.
The siting makes sense on its own terms. The ridge offers clear views northward, north-eastward, and southward over the low-lying valley ground, even if a higher ridge to the west limits the outlook in that direction. Whoever chose this spot was working with the same logic as most rath builders, wanting visibility and a degree of natural elevation, without necessarily needing the most commanding position available.