Ringfort (Rath), Modranstown, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Ringforts
There is something quietly melancholy about a place that has been formally declared demolished.
The ringfort at Modranstown in County Westmeath no longer registers on aerial photography, leaves no surface trace in the wet pasture that surrounds it, and has been effectively erased from the landscape. Yet for anyone who knows where to look, the maps alone tell a more layered story than the bare ground suggests.
Ringforts, also known as raths, were enclosed farmsteads of the early medieval period, typically defined by an earthen bank and an external ditch, or fosse, enclosing a domestic space. The Modranstown example was recorded on the 1837 Ordnance Survey six-inch map as an oval enclosure measuring roughly 47 metres east to west and 43 metres north to south, its bank lined with trees and set on the western side of an irregular field. By the time the revised 25-inch map was produced in 1913, the outline appeared slightly less regular, and isolated linear field boundaries had begun to assert themselves nearby. When the Office of Public Works visited in 1966, the monument was still just about legible: a low, tree-lined bank with some internal stone facing, and within the interior, vague traces of small structures that were thought at the time to be farm buildings. Those traces may in fact represent the remains of a much older hut site, though their antiquity remains uncertain. By 1975, the site had been officially recorded as demolished, the bank levelled and the fosse filled, leaving only the faint suggestion of a rise in gently undulating ground.
What survives, in a sense, is the documentary record of a disappearance. The 1837 Fair Plan map even annotated the site as a 'fort', a label that acknowledges a local memory of its significance at a time when the physical form was still intact. The extensive old field-banks and tillage ridges noted in the surrounding area hint at a long continuity of agricultural activity around the site, the kind of working landscape that often quietly absorbed and dismantled the monuments it grew up beside.
