Ringfort (Rath), Glengarriff Beg, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
On a north-facing slope in Glengarriff Beg, a low circular earthwork sits quietly in pasture, the kind of feature that a passing walker might dismiss as a natural rise in the ground.
It is, in fact, a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, a type of enclosed farmstead built during the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. These enclosures were typically the homes of farming families of some social standing, defined by a circular bank of earth and an outer ditch. This particular example measures approximately 35 metres in diameter, which places it comfortably within the typical range for such sites.
The earliest reliable record of the enclosure appears on the Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842, where it is shown as a clearly defined circular feature. The earthen bank survives to a height of about one metre, and the fosse, the external ditch that would originally have reinforced the defensive character of the enclosure, remains visible, running from north-northeast to south-southeast. The fosse is roughly three metres wide and three-quarters of a metre deep. A gap in the bank to the north-northeast is likely the site of the original entrance. What is also noticeable is that a modern field boundary curves around the outer edge of the fosse, suggesting that whoever laid out the present field system was working around the older monument rather than through it, a small act of accommodation that has inadvertently helped preserve what remains.
The site commands a fine open view to the northwest, north, and northeast, a positioning that was rarely accidental in early medieval Ireland, where visibility and the capacity to observe the surrounding landscape carried practical as well as symbolic weight. Beyond the bank and fosse, no other features are currently visible above ground.