Embanked enclosure, Ballybrack, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Ringforts
On a broad plateau at Ballybrack in County Waterford, a near-perfect circle of raised earth sits in the landscape doing its best to look like nothing more than a field boundary. That modest disguise has, in one small section to the north-east, become literal: the bank has been absorbed into a working field wall, its prehistoric geometry quietly repurposed for agricultural convenience. Only on the western and north-western arc does something older show through, where traces of external stone-facing hint at a more deliberate original construction.
The enclosure is roughly thirty metres across, defined by an earthen bank somewhere between three and four metres wide and rising to about one and a half metres on the interior side. An embanked enclosure of this kind, sometimes called a ringfort or rath depending on its precise form and function, was a common unit of settlement and farming in early medieval Ireland, though examples like this one, which lacks any visible fosse or surrounding ditch, can be harder to date with confidence. The absence of a fosse is notable: most ringforts were defined partly by the ditch from which their banks were dug, so a site with no trace of one either never had it or has had it levelled over the centuries. The entrance, three metres wide, faces west-north-west, an orientation that appears with some regularity in Irish enclosures of this type and may reflect practical considerations around prevailing weather or the position of the sun at particular times of year.
