Ringfort (Rath), Ballyguileataggle, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
A low arc of earth curving through a Limerick pasture is all that remains of what was once a clearly defined circular enclosure, and without knowing what to look for, you could walk past it without a second thought.
This is the nature of the rath, a type of ringfort common across early medieval Ireland, in which a roughly circular area of ground was enclosed by one or more earthen banks and ditches. They served as farmsteads, places of shelter and status for families of some means, and thousands of them once dotted the Irish countryside. Most have been reduced to precisely this kind of subtle trace.
The site at Ballyguileataggle sits on a north-facing slope, currently under pasture, and its original form is known largely thanks to the 1841 Ordnance Survey six-inch map, which recorded it as a roughly circular embanked enclosure approximately 30 metres in diameter. What survives on the ground today is a surviving arc of earthen bank running from the south around to the west, measuring about 22.9 metres in length. The bank itself is more pronounced on the interior side, rising to around 1.4 metres, while the exterior face is considerably reduced at roughly 0.7 metres. The level interior, which would have been the working and living area of whoever occupied the site, is now indistinguishable from the surrounding field. The record was compiled by Denis Power and uploaded in August 2011.
The site is in agricultural land, and as with many such earthwork survivals in County Limerick, access depends on the goodwill of the landowner and the practicalities of working farmland. The surviving bank segment is easiest to read from a position that allows you to look along its curve rather than across it, which helps the eye separate it from the natural undulation of the slope. The 1841 OS map remains the most useful reference for understanding what the enclosure originally looked like before time and farming reduced it to this single, quietly legible fragment.