Ringfort, Doon, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ringforts
Some places leave their clearest impression not on the ground but on paper. At Doon in County Waterford, a ringfort survives today as little more than a ghostly trace on an early Ordnance Survey map, its circular outline measuring roughly 35 metres across, drawn faintly enough to suggest the surveyors themselves were uncertain of what they were recording. Stand in the pasture on the east-facing slope where it lies, and you would see nothing at all. The earthwork has sunk below the threshold of visibility, absorbed back into the field without ceremony.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths or lios depending on regional tradition, were enclosed farmsteads typically built during the early medieval period, between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries. They were not military fortifications in any serious sense but rather domestic settlements, the bank and ditch marking out a family's home ground and providing some protection for livestock. Thousands once dotted the Irish landscape, and County Waterford has its share. What makes the Doon example quietly melancholy is how completely it has retreated from the physical world. Its most reliable record is the 1840 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, a document produced during the first systematic cartographic survey of Ireland, when the landscape still held enough surface variation for trained eyes to catch what centuries of agriculture had begun to erase. By the time that faint circle was inked onto paper, the ringfort was already more memory than monument.