Ringfort (Cashel), Laughil, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ringforts
On a gentle north-west-facing slope in County Longford, there is a site officially classified as a ringfort, yet almost everything about it resists that label.
A cashel is the drystone-walled cousin of the more familiar earthen ringfort, a type of enclosed farmstead common across early medieval Ireland, but the enclosure at Laughil seems to owe its present form less to ancient builders than to the activities of a later quarry. The rubble wall that traces an oval roughly 49 metres by 42 metres is only 20 to 50 centimetres high in places, with no clear coursing, no evidence of wall-facing inside or out, and no detectable fosse, the surrounding ditch that typically accompanies such enclosures. The most plausible reading is that quarried stone was simply dumped in a low heap along the line of naturally occurring outcropping rock, producing something that looks like a boundary but may never have functioned as one in any deliberate sense.
The site does not appear on the 1837 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, which is itself telling. By that point Ireland had been mapped with considerable thoroughness, and a genuine early medieval enclosure of this size would typically have been visible and recorded. The disused quarry that sits immediately to the north offers a more prosaic explanation for much of what is seen here. Several small cairns of loosely piled stones in the southern half of the interior are consistent with quarrying debris rather than any ritual or funerary purpose. Running through the interior is a north-east to south-west stone wall that bisects the space, and the remains of further walls are scattered across the scrub-covered ground. Two possible house structures are identifiable, one roughly central and one to the south, and both appear to date to the nineteenth century, suggesting the enclosed area was put to domestic use long after whatever original activity shaped the site.
What survives at Laughil is a layered palimpsest of land use: outcropping limestone, a possible early enclosure whose original form is now irrecoverable, a working quarry, and the footprint of nineteenth-century habitation, all compressed into a densely overgrown oval on a quiet Longford hillside. The interior is heavily scrubbed over, which makes close inspection difficult, but the views from the slope remain clear in all directions, a quality that presumably drew people to this spot across several very different centuries.
