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Ringfort

A ringfort is a circular or oval fortified enclosure, typically built on the ground and defined by an earthen bank and ditch that surround a central area, often with one or more dwellings inside. The best known examples are in Ireland, where they are called ráth or lios and usually date to the early medieval period (roughly 5th–12th centuries); similar circular earthworks occur elsewhere in Europe, with local variations.

Construction commonly features a single bank and ditch, sometimes with a stone revetment or multiple concentric

Rationale and use are debated, but ringforts are generally regarded as farmsteads or small communities that

Today, ringforts survive as earthworks and are often protected as monuments. Archaeological investigations have revealed domestic

banks.
Inside
is
a
courtyard
that
may
contain
timber
or
wattle-and-daub
houses.
Many
ringforts
also
include
souterrains,
underground
storage
chambers,
and
some
have
accessible
entrances
via
a
causeway.
required
defense,
asserted
landholding,
and
served
as
sites
for
daily
domestic
life.
They
may
have
housed
families,
workers,
and
livestock,
with
crops
stored
within
the
enclosure.
artifacts,
pottery,
and
occasionally
signs
of
craft
or
trade,
contributing
to
understanding
of
rural
life
in
early
medieval
Ireland
and,
more
broadly,
western
Europe.