Ringfort (Rath), Friarstown, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
Something is slightly off about this ringfort in Friarstown, and it takes a moment standing inside it to identify what.
The interior dips and shifts underfoot in an irregular way, sloping unevenly down toward the centre rather than presenting the level platform you might expect from an early medieval enclosure. The leading explanation is that the interior was quarried at some point after the fort fell out of use, its material extracted and carted away for purposes unrecorded, leaving behind a subtly hollowed-out shell sitting in poorly drained pasture about forty metres south of the Ahanload River.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths when defined primarily by earthen banks rather than stone, were the dominant form of enclosed settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically serving as farmsteads for a single family and their livestock between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries. This example is oval in plan, measuring approximately thirty-nine metres on its northeast to southwest axis and twenty-five metres across the other way. It is defined by a scarp, a sloped earthen face, around eight and a half metres wide and about half a metre high, and enclosed by a wide, flat-bottomed fosse, the trench dug to provide material for the bank, which here runs to nearly fourteen metres in width but is quite shallow at around thirty centimetres deep. The modest height of the surviving earthworks is consistent with centuries of agricultural pressure and general weathering, and it is not unusual for forts in low-lying, wet ground to have fared worse than those on drier, elevated sites.
The fort sits in working pasture, so access will depend on landowner permission and conditions underfoot should be expected to be soft, particularly through the wetter months. The surrounding landscape is flat enough that the ring of hills visible in all directions gives good orientation. What rewards careful attention here is not dramatic stonework or commanding height but the interior itself: walk slowly across it and notice how the ground falls away toward the middle in a way that no natural process neatly explains.