Ringfort (Rath), Milleennahorna By.), Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
On a hilltop in Milleennahorna townland, in the west of County Cork, a nearly circular earthwork sits quietly in pasture, its form largely intact after more than a thousand years of agricultural life going on around it.
It is a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, which was the standard form of rural enclosure used by farming families during the early medieval period, roughly from the fifth to the twelfth century. Thousands survive across Ireland, but each one carries its own particular character in the landscape, and this one is worth pausing over.
The enclosure measures approximately 28.3 metres north to south and 28 metres east to west, making it a near-perfect circle of modest size. Its defining feature on the northern to east-south-eastern arc is an earthen bank standing some 3.1 metres high, a considerable bulk of material that would originally have supported a timber palisade or a dense thorn hedge, providing both a physical and a symbolic boundary around the homestead within. The remaining arc, running from east-south-east back around to the north, drops to a low scarp no more than 0.6 metres high, suggesting either differential survival or a deliberate variation in construction. A shallow external fosse, or ditch, follows the northern to east-south-eastern stretch, the material dug from it likely contributing to the height of the bank alongside it. The hilltop position is typical: ringfort builders favoured elevated ground for visibility, drainage, and the simple prestige of being seen.
