Ringfort (Cashel), Carneywoodlands, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Ringforts
On slightly elevated pasture in County Tipperary, there is a circular enclosure that has quietly been living two lives at once.
From a distance it reads as a tidy stone-walled ring, the kind of boundary a farmer might build to shelter a stand of trees. Look more carefully, though, and the ground inside tells a different story, one that predates the current wall by many centuries.
A cashel is a ringfort built from stone rather than earthen banks and ditches, and they were common across early medieval Ireland as enclosures for farmsteads and small communities. The enclosure at Carneywoodlands measures roughly 37 metres across its north-south axis. The drystone wall visible today, standing about a metre high and half a metre thick, appears to be of relatively recent construction, but set inside it are the low footings of an earlier wall, the ghost of the original cashel boundary running just beneath the later build. Whoever put up the newer wall seems to have followed the same line, perhaps knowingly, perhaps simply because the ground still held the shape. The rock outcrop in the interior also shows signs of quarrying, suggesting the site has been worked and modified over time. The current use, sheltering a tree-ring, is a quietly practical repurposing of a form that has always been about enclosure and boundary-making, even if the original purpose was quite different from planting a copse.



