Ringfort (Rath), Southhill, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Ringforts
On a low hillock on the demesne lands of South Hill House in County Westmeath, there is an earthwork that cartographers in the nineteenth century could not quite agree on.
The 1837 Ordnance Survey Fair Plan shows it clearly: an oval enclosure planted with trees inside a second outer oval, labelled simply as 'fort'. Just a year later, the published six-inch map omitted it as an antiquity altogether, reclassifying it instead as a landscaped tree-ring. That small editorial decision, the difference between a prehistoric monument and a Georgian garden feature, sits at the heart of what makes this site genuinely ambiguous.
What survives on the ground is a sub-circular area roughly 24 metres across from north-west to south-east and 26 metres north-east to south-west, enclosed by two earthen banks with a fosse, a ditch, between them and a further fosse on the outside. A ringfort, sometimes called a rath, is an enclosed farmstead of early medieval date, typically circular and defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches; this one fits that description reasonably well. The interior slopes from north-west to south-east, and tree stumps are still visible around the perimeter. The question is whether those trees were always there, the remnant of an ancient enclosure that was later tidied into a garden feature by the owners of South Hill House, or whether the whole thing was constructed as a deliberate landscape ornament with no prehistoric origin at all. The relationship between Ireland's country estates and the ancient earthworks that happened to fall within their boundaries was often complicated; landowners sometimes preserved ringforts as romantic curiosities, sometimes levelled them, and occasionally built new features that mimicked them.