Ringfort (Rath), Ballydonagh More, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
Most ringforts in Ireland are single-banked enclosures, the remains of early medieval farmsteads where a family lived within a raised earthen ring for status and security.
The one at Ballydonagh More is more elaborate than that, presenting at least two and possibly three concentric banks with intervening ditches, a form that suggests this was no ordinary agricultural holding when it was built.
The site sits on a west-facing slope just east of a road, and its dimensions are substantial: roughly 50 metres north to south and just over 48 metres east to west. The inner bank, earthen and topped with large stones, rises to about a metre in height, with a broad shallow fosse, or ditch, between it and the outer bank, which is very broadly based and stands externally to around one and a half metres. A third and outermost bank is present but may be a more recent field fence rather than an original prehistoric or early medieval feature. Gaps in the banks to the east are accompanied by causeways, suggesting a formal entrance arrangement, and further gaps appear to the west-southwest, though some of these are likely later breaks rather than original openings. The interior slopes gently westward and, along with the banks themselves, has been planted with conifers at some point, which both obscures the earthworks and, in a way, preserves them from agricultural disturbance.
Multivallate ringforts, meaning those with more than one enclosing bank, are considerably rarer than their single-banked counterparts and are generally associated with higher-status occupants, perhaps a local chieftain or a well-established farming family in the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. The presence of causeways at the eastern entrance lends the site a degree of deliberate formality that is easier to appreciate on the ground than any plan or measurement can convey. The conifer planting makes the earthworks less immediately readable from a distance, but walking the circuit of the outer bank gives a clear sense of just how much material was moved to construct and maintain this place.