Ringfort (Rath), Graigoor, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
A large boulder marks the southern edge of what was once a doorway, and that detail alone tells you something is here worth pausing over.
Set into pastureland at the foot of a gently west-south-west facing slope in Graigoor, County Limerick, this ringfort is easy to overlook, its enclosing bank barely rising above ground level in places and its surrounding ditch heavily obscured by overgrowth. Yet the basic geometry remains legible: a roughly circular enclosure measuring around 21 metres north to south and 24 metres east to west, the kind of modest domestic farmstead that was replicated thousands of times across early medieval Ireland.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths when constructed from earth rather than stone, were the standard unit of rural settlement from roughly the sixth to the twelfth centuries. Most enclosed the home and outbuildings of a single farming family, the bank and external ditch (called a fosse) providing a degree of security for livestock rather than any serious military defence. At Graigoor, the fosse runs from the west-north-west around to the north, measuring about 2.6 metres wide and 0.35 metres deep where it survives best. The bank itself reaches an external height of 0.75 metres along its south-west to north-north-east arc, though it diminishes noticeably as it curves east, where a dry-stone field boundary has been built skirting close alongside it. That same field boundary runs tangentially to the southern arc of the bank, suggesting the landscape has been quietly reorganised around the older structure over the centuries. The site was recorded and compiled by Denis Power, with notes uploaded in August 2011.
The interior today is covered by mature deciduous trees, which gives the enclosure a shaded, slightly secluded quality even though it sits within open farmland. The ground slopes gently downward toward the west-south-west. The most clearly defined feature for a visitor is the entrance gap on the western side, approximately 1.8 metres wide, with a large boulder still in place on its southern edge. The fosse is harder to read, largely swallowed by vegetation, but the bank to the south-west remains the most intact section and gives the clearest sense of the original form. Access is across private agricultural land, so permission from the landowner should be sought before visiting.