Promontory fort - coastal, Knockadoon, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Forts
At the tip of the Knockadoon peninsula in east Cork, a long finger of land pushes out into Lough Gur's neighbouring stretch of coastline, and somewhere along its clifftop edge the remains of a promontory fort survive.
These structures belong to one of Ireland's most elemental forms of defensive architecture: a natural headland, its landward side cut off by one or more earthen or stone ramparts, leaving the sea cliffs to do the work on the remaining sides. The result is a fortified enclosure that required minimal construction to achieve maximum security, and examples like this one pepper the Irish coastline from Kerry to Antrim.
Knockadoon itself is a place with deep archaeological layers. The peninsula sits within the Lough Gur landscape in County Cork, a region long associated with prehistoric and early historic activity. Promontory forts of this coastal type are generally associated with the Iron Age, though some were in use well into the early medieval period, and it is not always easy to assign a precise date without excavation. The defining feature of any such fort is the cutting rampart, a bank and ditch thrown across the neck of the headland, effectively turning geography into architecture. On more exposed Atlantic coasts these earthworks can be dramatic, but here on the Knockadoon shoreline the fort occupies a quieter, less celebrated stretch of water.
