Ringfort (Rath), Slievenavadoge, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ringforts
On the slopes of Slievenavadoge in County Kerry, a ringfort sits in the kind of quiet that tends to accumulate around very old things.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths, were enclosed farmsteads typical of the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to twelfth centuries. They were built by farming families who raised earthen banks around their homes and outbuildings, partly for livestock management and partly for defence. Thousands survive across Ireland, yet each one carries its own particular relationship with the land it occupies, and those on elevated ground, as this one appears to be, were often positioned to command sight lines across the surrounding countryside.
Slievenavadoge itself is a hill in Kerry whose name, in the Irish tradition of landscape naming, likely encodes something of what was once observed or experienced there, though the specifics of this site's history remain, for the moment, unrecorded in accessible public sources. What can be said with confidence is that whoever built this enclosure chose their ground carefully, as was consistent with the period. Early medieval rath builders understood terrain, and a hillside position would have offered both visibility and a degree of natural elevation to supplement the man-made banks.