Ringfort (Rath), Kilcolman East, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
Somewhere along a gentle north-facing slope in Kilcolman East, a ringfort that was once a near-perfect circle has been quietly reshaped into a D.
Not by time alone, but by the practical demands of horse training. Where early medieval farmers once enclosed their homestead within a round earthen bank, a modern equestrian platform has sliced through the eastern arc of the monument, leaving behind something that reads, to the casual eye, more like a curved field boundary than an ancient enclosure.
Ringforts, sometimes called raths, are among the most common archaeological monuments in Ireland, built roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries as defended farmsteads for a single family or small community. They typically consist of a circular bank of earth with an external ditch, known as a fosse, and would originally have enclosed a house, outbuildings, and perhaps a small yard. The Kilcolman East example was recorded on the 1923 Ordnance Survey six-inch map as an embanked circular enclosure roughly 45 metres in diameter, which gives a reasonable sense of its original footprint. By the time Denis Power compiled the field record, uploaded in August 2011, the horse-training platform running from the east-south-east to the west-south-west had already truncated the circuit considerably. What survives is a D-shaped area measuring approximately 33 metres north to south and 37.5 metres east to west. The earthen bank itself is modest, standing just 0.15 metres above the interior surface and 0.65 metres above the exterior ground, and the fosse outside it is around 2.3 metres wide and half a metre deep, running along the surviving western and southern arc.
The interior is level and under pasture, which means there is little dramatic surface detail to read once you are standing inside it. The fosse is the most legible feature, a shallow but distinct channel that traces the older perimeter where it has not been cut away. The site sits near the base of a hill on ground that would have offered reasonable drainage and a degree of natural elevation, practical considerations that clearly guided whoever chose the spot. Access is across working farmland, so the usual courtesies apply before approaching the monument closely.