Ringfort (Rath), Newtown, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
Thousands of ringforts survive across Ireland, yet each one carries its own quiet peculiarities.
This example in Newtown, north Cork, sits in open pasture on a gentle south-west-facing slope, positioned to the north-east of a small stream that runs northwards to join the Awbeg River. What makes it worth pausing over is the care its original builders took with the terrain: the interior has been deliberately raised on its southern side to level out the natural hillslope, a small but telling act of engineering that speaks to how seriously these enclosures were constructed.
A ringfort, or rath, is an early medieval enclosed farmstead, typically dating from roughly the sixth to the twelfth century, in which a family would have lived within a raised earthen bank and ditch for both security and social display. This one is roughly circular, measuring about 43.7 metres north-north-west to south-south-east and just over 40 metres across the other axis. The enclosing earthen bank still stands to an internal height of around 1.4 metres and an external height of 2.1 metres along its better-preserved northern and western arc, though a field boundary has cut into and truncated that section. Around much of the remaining circuit, an outer fosse, the defensive ditch that would originally have surrounded the bank, survives to a depth of around 1.65 metres. The entrance, a gap of 8 metres, faces south-south-east, an orientation that would have caught the morning light and kept the prevailing wet westerlies largely at the occupants' backs.
Access to the interior is straightforward enough across the grass, but the fosse on the north-north-east to east-south-east arc is another matter: it has become choked with overgrowth and dumped branches, making close inspection difficult. The stream running along the north-east boundary is an easy landmark for orienting yourself once you are on the ground.