Fort, Mornin, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ringforts
There is a fort at Mornin in County Longford that no longer exists in any visible sense.
Standing in the moderately drained pasture where it once lay, you would find nothing to suggest that a substantial earthwork ever occupied the spot. What remains is essentially a cartographic memory and a faint chemical trace in the soil.
The site was recorded as a circular enclosure on the 1837 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, labelled simply as "Fort", the common term used by nineteenth-century surveyors for a rath, which is a raised ringfort of earthen construction typically dating to the early medieval period in Ireland. This one measured approximately 45 metres in diameter, which would have made it a reasonably substantial example of its type. By 1976, however, ploughing had already done considerable damage. A report from that year noted that part of the rath had been recently turned over, and that the only evidence of the enclosing bank surviving above the disturbed ground was a semicircle of light-coloured clay, where the earthwork's material had been spread and mixed into the topsoil. Even that faint discolouration has since been lost; the site is not visible at ground level today.
What the 1976 account captures is a moment of erasure in progress, the point at which an early medieval landscape feature passed from damaged survival into near-total absence. The pale arc of clay described in that report is itself now likely gone, leaving the 1837 map as the clearest record that anything was ever there at all.