Ringfort (Rath), Condonstown, Co. Kilkenny
Co. Kilkenny |
Ringforts
In the townland of Condonstown in County Kilkenny, a rath sits quietly in the landscape, the kind of earthwork that most people pass without a second glance.
A rath, or ringfort, is a roughly circular enclosure defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, built during the early medieval period, broadly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. These were the farmsteads of their time, enclosing a family's dwelling and animals within a defensible perimeter. Ireland has tens of thousands of them, yet each occupies a specific patch of ground that someone, over a thousand years ago, chose deliberately.
Condonstown itself takes its name from the Condon family, a Hiberno-Norman dynasty whose presence shaped parts of Munster and the south-east of Ireland following the twelfth-century invasion. The townland name suggests a layer of medieval settlement laid over what may already have been a much older inhabited landscape. The rath predates any Norman connection; it belongs to an earlier order of things, when landholding, status, and daily life were organised around these circular enclosures that punctuate the Irish countryside from one county to the next. Beyond that, the documentary record for this particular site remains thin.