Ringfort (Rath), Knockbrown, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
Some of the most telling archaeological sites in Ireland are the ones that are no longer there.
At Knockbrown in County Cork, a ringfort once occupied a south-west-facing slope with an open view stretching southward, the kind of position that early medieval farmers and their families chose deliberately, for drainage, for light, and for the ability to see approaching visitors or trouble. A ringfort, sometimes called a rath, was a roughly circular enclosure, typically defined by an earthen bank and ditch, that served as a farmstead during the early medieval period. The Knockbrown example has been levelled entirely, removed during the clearance of field fencing, and today there is no visible trace of it at ground level.
What survives is a cartographic ghost. The Ordnance Survey six-inch map of 1842 recorded the site as a circular enclosure, which is how it entered the archaeological record at all. That map, produced during the first comprehensive survey of Ireland, captured countless such features that were already under pressure from agricultural improvement and land reorganisation. In this case the pressure eventually won. By the time the site was formally described in the Archaeological Inventory of County Cork, the earthworks were gone, leaving only the 1842 annotation as evidence that something had stood there.