Ringfort, Kilcreggane, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ringforts
There is something quietly disorienting about a monument that can be mapped but not seen. In a pasture near the Nier river in County Waterford, there lies a ringfort, one of the thousands of circular enclosed settlements built across Ireland roughly between the early medieval period and the Norman arrival, that has effectively vanished from view at ground level. You could walk across it without knowing it was there.
What survives, or at least what was recorded, is an embanked enclosure approximately 35 metres in external diameter, noted on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1840. Ringforts, known in Irish as raths or lios depending on regional usage, were typically defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches enclosing a farmstead, and their circular form is usually one of the most legible features in the Irish landscape, recognisable from a distance even after a thousand years of agricultural pressure. The Kilcreggane example sits on a low rise some 35 metres from the southern bank of the Nier, a river that runs east to west through the Comeragh uplands. Whether the bank has been ploughed down over the intervening centuries, or whether the low-lying pasture simply swallows the relief, the structure no longer registers as a physical presence to anyone standing on it.
