Ringfort (Rath), Loughane, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
A slight rise in a field does not look like much from the road, but at Loughane in County Cork that gentle swell in the pasture is all that remains of a ringfort, a type of enclosed farmstead that was once the most common settlement form in early medieval Ireland.
Thousands were built across the country between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries, typically consisting of a circular bank and ditch enclosing a domestic area, and this one now survives only as a faint suggestion of its former shape.
The evidence for what once stood here has to be pieced together from cartographic clues. The Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842 recorded a hachured arc running east to west along the south side of a local laneway, with the northern portion of the earthwork already cut through or obscured by that same lane, leaving a D-shaped rather than fully circular outline on paper. Later OS maps from 1903 and 1937 continued to register the presence of something here, though by then the defining features had reduced to a curve in the laneway to the north and a field fence to the east. The rath itself, measuring approximately 20.3 metres in diameter, has since been levelled entirely. What the maps traced over nearly a century was a slow disappearance: agricultural improvement, boundary adjustments, and the ordinary passage of farm traffic gradually absorbing a structure that had already stood for perhaps a thousand years before the first surveyor arrived.
For anyone walking the area today, the only visible indicator is that low rise to the south and south-west of the circular area, and the slight curve the laneway still traces at its northern edge. It is the kind of place that rewards patience and a good map rather than any dramatic reveal.

