Fort, Ballivor, Co. Meath
Co. Meath |
Ritual/Ceremonial
On the flat, low-lying ground outside Ballivor in County Meath, there is a feature that appears on the 1836 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map labelled simply as a "Fort".
The label carries a weight of implication, suggesting an earthwork of some age and purpose. The reality on the ground is rather more ambiguous: what survives is an overgrown gravel hillock, partly quarried away, with a hollow at its centre measuring roughly 20 by 15 metres where material has been extracted. It is the kind of site that quietly resists easy interpretation.
The OS map recorded it as a D-shaped feature, approximately 45 metres in a northwest to southeast direction and 35 metres across, though even that outline had already been compromised by the time the surveyors arrived. Two field banks, one running northwest to southeast and another northeast to southwest, had cut into it at the southwest and northwest corners respectively, so the shape the cartographers drew was already a truncated version of whatever had existed before. A canalised stream runs about 170 metres to the northeast. Whether any of this points to a genuine prehistoric or early medieval enclosure, the kind of ringfort that is common across the Irish midlands, or simply to a natural gravel rise that was always more geology than archaeology, remains genuinely uncertain. There is a possible earthwork recorded about 160 metres to the northwest, which adds a slight tantalising note, but does not resolve the question. The site may not be an antiquity at all.