Ringfort (Rath), Sallypark, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
There is nothing to see at Sallypark, at least not with the naked eye from the ground.
The ringfort that once occupied a gentle south-facing slope in this part of north Cork has been levelled completely, ploughed out of existence by centuries of tillage. Yet it persists, in a way that requires a different kind of looking altogether. From the air, under the right conditions, the ghost of the enclosure reappears as a cropmark, the buried ditches betraying themselves through subtle differences in how the vegetation above them grows.
A rath is a ringfort, the most common monument type in the Irish landscape, typically a circular area of raised ground enclosed by one or more earthen banks and ditches, used as a farmstead during the early medieval period. At Sallypark, the enclosure was bivallate, meaning it had two concentric rings of bank and ditch rather than one, a feature that sometimes, though not always, indicates higher status. The Ordnance Survey maps tell the story of its slow disappearance with quiet precision. On the 1842 six-inch sheet it appears as a circular area of roughly twenty metres in diameter, marked with a broken line. By 1905 it had shrunk on paper to around eighteen metres, rendered with hachuring to suggest raised ground. By 1937 that raised area had reduced further still, to about fifteen metres. Each revision reflects both improving survey technique and, almost certainly, the continuing bite of the plough. The aerial photographs that eventually captured it as a cropmark also preserved evidence of an earlier field system in the same area, suggesting that the landscape around Sallypark had been organised and worked by people long before the ringfort itself was built.