Ringfort (Cashel), Scarteenakillin, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
On a gentle slope facing south-west above the Leamawaddra River in West Cork, a roughly circular enclosure sits quietly in pasture, its stones low and partly tumbled, its outline still readable in the land if you know where to look.
This is a cashel, the Irish term for a ringfort built from stone rather than earth and timber, and the type is found across much of Munster where field stone was plentiful and easier to work than cutting sods. What makes this one worth a second look is a small but telling detail of construction: on the south-west side, where the slope drops away, the builders raised the interior ground level to keep the platform roughly flat, a quiet piece of practical engineering carried out perhaps fifteen hundred years ago.
The enclosure measures just over twenty metres across at its widest, a scale typical of the farmsteads that ringforts are now understood to represent, individual family compounds of the early medieval period rather than the forts their name implies. The boundary survives as a low ruined stone wall, standing only around thirty centimetres on the western to southern arc, but rising as a scarp faced with large boulders on the southern to western stretch, where it reaches about one and a half metres. The original line of the wall has become harder to read on the north-east and south-east sides, probably through centuries of stone removal and agricultural disturbance. The entrance, facing north-north-west and just under two metres wide, is the clearest surviving feature of the structure's original design. Deciduous trees now grow along the interior edge, softening what would once have been an open, defensible perimeter.