Ringfort (Rath), Aghabeg, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ringforts
In the townland of Aghabeg in north County Kerry, a ringfort once stood that has since been erased so completely that the ground itself offers no sign it ever existed.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths, were typically circular enclosures defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, used as farmsteads and settlements throughout the early medieval period in Ireland. What makes this particular example quietly notable is not what it was, but what it has become: nothing at all, not even a faint earthwork or a slight rise in a field.
The enclosure appears on the Ordnance Survey map of 1842, positioned to the south-east of another recorded ringfort in the same area. By the time the next major survey was conducted in 1916, it had already vanished from the cartographic record. Whether it was levelled for agricultural improvement, gradually eroded, or disturbed by some other process in the intervening decades is not documented. Its existence now rests entirely on that single nineteenth-century map and on C. Toal's North Kerry Archaeological Survey, published in 1995, which catalogued it among the archaeological features of the region. No surface trace remains today.