Ringfort (Rath), Dooncaha, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
In a pasture field in Dooncaha, County Limerick, the ground gives itself away only gradually.
What looks at first like a slight irregularity in the slope, a modest rise or a gentle terrace, turns out to be the remnant of a ringfort, one of the thousands of such enclosures scattered across Ireland that once served as the farmsteads and homesteads of early medieval families. This one is easy to overlook, and that is part of what makes it worth attending to.
A ringfort, or rath, is a roughly circular enclosed settlement, typically built between the sixth and tenth centuries, though many were used earlier and later. They were usually defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, sometimes reinforced with stone, and served as a defended farmyard rather than a military fortification. The Dooncaha example sits on a break in a northeast-facing slope and takes an oval form, measuring approximately 44 metres north to south and 51.3 metres east to west. Its boundary is not uniform. Along the southwestern to western arc, a scarped edge, essentially a cut or shaped drop in the ground around 0.5 metres high and 4 metres wide, defines the perimeter clearly, and this is where the feature is best preserved. From the west around to the southeast, an earth-and-stone bank roughly 0.6 metres high continues the enclosure, though this section has been absorbed into the surrounding field boundary system over time, making it harder to read as a distinct ancient feature. From the southeast back around to the southwest, no enclosing element survives at all. The interior, still under pasture, slopes gently downward toward the southwest. The record was compiled by Denis Power and uploaded in August 2011.
Because much of the surviving earthwork has been incorporated into modern field boundaries, the site requires a slow eye rather than a dramatic reveal. The southwestern arc, where the scarp is most legible, is the best place to get a sense of the original form. Visitors should expect a working agricultural landscape, with access dependent on land ownership and the usual courtesies that apply in rural Ireland. Low winter light, which throws even shallow earthworks into sharper relief, can help in reading the ground. The interior gives little away on the surface, but knowing that beneath the pasture lies the floor of a dwelling space used well over a thousand years ago lends the field a particular quality of quiet.