Ringfort (Rath), Gortigrenane, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
There is nothing left to see at Gortigrenane, and that absence is precisely what makes it worth knowing about.
On a slope above Ringabella creek in County Cork, the ground holds no visible trace of what was once a rath, a type of circular earthwork enclosure used as a farmstead during early medieval Ireland, typically defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches. The site has been completely levelled, absorbed into the agricultural landscape without so much as a shadow in the grass to mark where it stood.
What we do know comes from the 1842 Ordnance Survey six-inch map, which recorded a circular enclosure of approximately twenty-five metres in diameter, already bisected at that point by a field fence running roughly north-north-west to south-south-east. The fence line tells its own quiet story: by the mid-nineteenth century the rath had already been subordinated to the practical demands of farming, its form divided and its meaning obscured. At some point after the map was made, whatever remained above ground was levelled entirely. The creek below, Ringabella, flows on regardless, as it would have done when whoever built and occupied the rath looked out over the same water, probably somewhere between the fifth and twelfth centuries.