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, are circular enclosures defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, and they were the most common form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Tens of thousands once existed across the island; many survive only as faint cropmarks or slight rises in a field. The one on Slievenavadoge is among those whose full record remains to be published, which gives it a particular kind of obscurity even within a category of monument already prone to being overlooked.
The mountain itself, Slievenavadoge, sits within the broader Kerry landscape shaped by glacial movement and the slow work of Atlantic weather. The name, like many Irish place names, likely encodes something about the local terrain or its former inhabitants, though without fuller documentation the specifics remain elusive. What can be said with confidence is that whoever built this enclosure chose elevated ground, as was common practice, perhaps for the practical advantages of visibility and drainage, or perhaps for reasons that mixed the defensive with the symbolic. A rath would typically have enclosed a farmstead, the bank and ditch marking the boundary between the domestic and the wider world.