Ringfort, Toorreagh, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ringforts
Some of Ireland's most ancient settlements are invisible to the naked eye, and the ringfort at Toorreagh in County Waterford is a fitting example. What was once a circular embanked enclosure, roughly thirty metres in external diameter, now sits flush with the surrounding pasture at the top of an east-facing slope, its outlines entirely lost at ground level. Ringforts, which were typically enclosed farmsteads built during the early medieval period, are among the most common archaeological monument types in Ireland, yet many have been so thoroughly levelled by centuries of agriculture that they survive only as crop marks or cartographic records.
The clearest evidence for this particular enclosure comes from the 1840 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, which recorded it as a distinct circular earthwork in the landscape. The OS six-inch series, produced in the early nineteenth century, captured many features that would subsequently disappear, making it an invaluable document for archaeologists working backwards from the present. The Toorreagh site sits on level ground at the crest of its slope, a position consistent with the kind of defensible, well-drained location that early medieval farming communities typically favoured when establishing enclosed settlements.
