Ringfort (Rath), Ballyadeen, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
There is nothing left to see at Ballyadeen, and that, in its own quiet way, is the point.
A ringfort once stood here on level ground in North Cork, a circular earthen enclosure of around twenty metres in diameter, the kind of defended farmstead that was a fixture of early medieval Irish rural life. Ringforts, or raths, were typically built between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries, serving as enclosed homesteads for farming families, their banks and ditches offering a degree of protection for livestock and household. The one at Ballyadeen has been levelled entirely, leaving no visible surface trace. The field is now tillage land, and nothing interrupts it.
What we know of it comes from the Ordnance Survey's six-inch map of 1842, where it appears as a hachured circular enclosure, the cartographers' conventional shorthand for an earthwork rising above the surrounding ground. At that point the structure was sufficiently intact to be recorded and mapped. Sometime between that survey and the present, the rath was cleared, most likely in the course of agricultural improvement, the earthen banks broken up and spread, the enclosed interior absorbed into the working field around it. It was not an unusual fate. Hundreds of ringforts across Ireland were removed during the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries as farming became more mechanised and land more intensively worked, despite the widespread folk belief that such sites were associated with the supernatural and that disturbing them invited misfortune.