Ringfort (Rath), Oughtagh, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Ringforts
In a field at Oughtagh in County Galway, a roughly circular earthwork sits in quiet disrepair, its outlines still legible but only just.
This is a rath, the most common monument type surviving in the Irish landscape, a form of enclosed farmstead used from the early medieval period onwards. The enclosing elements here, a bank of earth and an external fosse, or ditch, once formed a continuous boundary roughly thirty metres across, slightly longer on its north-south axis than its east-west one. What makes this particular example quietly interesting is not any dramatic survival but almost the opposite: the way it illustrates how such monuments gradually lose their edges to the ordinary pressures of farming life.
The bank still stands along the southwestern to northeastern arc, though in places the enclosing element reduces to nothing more than a scarp, a slope in the ground rather than a raised feature. The fosse remains visible at the northeast and south. The gaps cut through the bank at several points appear to be modern interference rather than original entrances, suggesting the monument was treated as an obstacle by later agricultural activity rather than a feature worth preserving. Most telling of all, a field boundary has been laid directly over the enclosing elements along the northeastern through to the southern side, effectively cannibalising the prehistoric or early medieval earthwork and incorporating it into a later land division. A second ringfort lies roughly a hundred metres to the northeast, making this a paired or closely associated grouping, something not uncommon in areas of early medieval settlement but always worth noting where the evidence survives.