Ringfort (Cashel), Cahermore, Co. Clare
Co. Clare |
Ringforts
In the townland of Cahermore in County Clare, a cashel sits quietly in the landscape, its name carrying a clue to its construction.
Where most ringforts were built from earthen banks and ditches, a cashel is the stone equivalent, a roughly circular enclosure defined by dry-stone walls rather than raised earth. They are particularly associated with the west of Ireland, where limestone and other workable stone lay close to the surface and made such construction practical. This one belongs to a broader pattern of early medieval settlement across the Burren and its fringes, a region where the ground itself seems to have encouraged people to build in stone for well over a thousand years.
Cashels of this kind typically date to the early medieval period, roughly the fifth to twelfth centuries, when they served as enclosed farmsteads for a single family or small kin group. The walls, sometimes several metres thick, defined a protected space for livestock and living quarters, and the surrounding landscape would have been managed for grazing, tillage, and fuel. The townland name Cahermore, from the Irish Cathair Mhór meaning "great stone fort", suggests the site had sufficient presence in the local imagination to shape the place name itself, which is a reasonable indication of its scale or prominence at some point in the past. Clare contains a remarkable density of such monuments, and this example in Cahermore is one of many that survive in varying states of preservation across the county.