Ringfort (Rath), Dromin, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ringforts
In a field at Dromin in north County Kerry, there is nothing left to see.
That, in its own quiet way, is the point. A ringfort once stood here, the kind of circular earthwork enclosure, known in Irish as a rath, that farmers and their families built throughout the early medieval period as a combination of homestead and defended boundary. Thousands survive across Ireland in various states of preservation. This one does not survive at all.
What makes the Dromin site particularly telling is the sequence of its recorded existence. When the Ordnance Survey mapped the area in 1841 and 1842, the enclosure was not noted, suggesting it was either already indistinct or simply passed over. By the time a later edition of the map was produced, it appeared as a circular feature, briefly fixed in the cartographic record. Then, in 1976, it was levelled entirely. No bank, no ditch, no shadow in the grass remains. The date is precise enough to feel deliberate, the kind of decision made in the context of agricultural improvement and land clearance that quietly erased considerable numbers of similar sites across the country during the latter half of the twentieth century.