Ringfort (Rath), Caolmhagh Mór, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
In the pastureland of Caolmhagh Mór, a roughly circular earthwork sits on a south-facing slope, quietly doing what thousands of Irish ringforts have done for well over a millennium: enduring.
A ringfort, or rath, is an enclosed farmstead of the early medieval period, typically defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, and this one in Mid Cork presents a particular kind of quiet complexity once you start reading its dimensions against the land it occupies.
The enclosure measures 38 metres across in both directions, making it a broadly typical example of its type, though the way it was constructed reveals a practical intelligence. Because the ground drops away on the southern side, the interior has been deliberately raised to create a level platform, a common solution in sloped terrain that required considerable effort and planning. The boundary itself is not uniform: a scarp standing around 2.25 metres high runs from the east-southeast around to the southwest, where it gives way to a bank reaching 2.1 metres before continuing northward. From the north-northeast back around to the east-southeast, the original earthwork has been replaced by an ordinary field fence, a substitution that was presumably convenient for whoever farmed this land in more recent centuries. There is a gap of 4.4 metres in the bank to the northeast, most likely the original entrance. The interior still carries the faint corrugations of cultivation ridges running on a north-south axis, evidence of agricultural use long after the site's early medieval function had been forgotten. A silage pit now occupies the southeast quadrant. More intriguing is what is absent: the 1842 Ordnance Survey six-inch map marks a limekiln within the bank to the southeast, a structure used for burning limestone to produce agricultural lime, but no trace of it remains visible on the ground today.