Ringfort (Rath), Dromanarrigle, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
On a south-facing slope in the pastureland of Dromanarrigle in north Cork, there is almost nothing left to see, and yet the ground itself tells a quiet story.
What once stood here was a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, a roughly circular earthen enclosure typically dating from the early medieval period and used as a farmstead or place of local habitation. Thousands of them survive across Ireland in various states of preservation, but this one has been levelled, its banks flattened by centuries of agricultural use, leaving only a subtle rise in the turf to hint at what lay beneath.
The clearest evidence for the site comes not from the ground but from paper. The Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842 recorded it as a hachured circular enclosure, the cartographers' method of indicating an earthwork through small radiating lines suggesting slope and form. The enclosure measured approximately thirty metres in diameter, a fairly typical size for a rath of its kind. By the time that map was made, the monument may already have been in decline, but the surveyors still thought it worth marking. Since then, the slow work of ploughing and grazing has done the rest.