Ringfort (Rath), Riddlestown, Co. Limerick

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Ringforts

Ringfort (Rath), Riddlestown, Co. Limerick

There is a particular kind of satisfaction in finding something that refuses to announce itself.

The ringfort at Riddlestown in County Limerick is exactly that sort of place: a subtle depression and rise in a working pasture field, its boundaries barely lifting above the surrounding grass, easy to walk past without registering what you are actually looking at. What survives is a roughly circular enclosure, measuring 23.8 metres north to south and 23.5 metres east to west, defined not by a dramatic earthen bank but by a scarped edge, a cut or sloped face in the ground that signals the old boundary of the enclosed space.

Ringforts, known in Irish as raths when they are earthen rather than stone-built, were the standard form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically dating from around the fifth to the twelfth century. They functioned as enclosed farmsteads, the encircling bank and ditch offering protection for a family, their livestock, and their home. At Riddlestown, the scarp that marks this boundary survives to a height of around 0.6 metres on its better-preserved eastern arc, with a width of 5.5 metres at that point. Moving round to the north-west, the feature becomes very indistinct, and the northern stretch, while distinct, is considerably lower, reaching only 0.55 metres in height and narrowing to 4.1 metres in width. The site was recorded and compiled by Denis Power, with notes uploaded in August 2011, and sits on a break in a north-west-facing slope, the northern third of the interior actually sloping downward toward the north-north-west rather than sitting level like the rest of the enclosure.

The site sits entirely under pasture, which means access depends on the cooperation of the landowner and the condition of the ground underfoot. A field boundary runs along the base of the scarp at the north-east, which can help orient a visitor trying to trace the edge of the enclosure. The best time to visit is during low winter sunlight or after a frost, when raking light and slight ground moisture can throw even modest earthworks into clearer relief. Standing inside the enclosure and looking back toward the eastern arc gives the clearest sense of the original boundary, where the scarp is most coherent. The overall impression is of a site that has survived through obscurity rather than celebration, its modest scale the very reason it remains at all.

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