Enclosure, Rathmore North, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Enclosures
A roughly circular earthwork sits in pastureland in Rathmore North, County Limerick, its form preserved well enough that the entrance, a gap in the surrounding ditch with a ramp leading up to the central platform, is still readable on the ground.
What makes this enclosure quietly unusual is the absence of any bank. Most ringforts and enclosures of this type in Ireland combine an earthen bank with an outer ditch, or fosse, to define and defend the enclosed space. Here, only the fosse survives, surrounding a raised circular platform that measures roughly 43 metres northeast to southwest and 42 metres northwest to southeast, according to the 1897 edition of the Ordnance Survey Ireland 25-inch map. A field boundary cuts across the northwest edge, which is the kind of gradual, incremental damage that has reduced so many similar monuments across the Irish countryside without anyone quite noticing.
The site was formally described by O'Kelly in 1944, who classified it as Earthwork Type A and recorded an overall diameter of around 37 metres, noting the circular earthen platform, the surrounding fosse, and the eastern entrance where the ditch is interrupted to allow access via the ramp. The classification suggests a reasonably well-understood monument type, though the lack of any surviving bank sets it apart from the more typical profile. It sits approximately 325 metres northeast of the townland boundary with Rathmore South, and a second enclosure, separately recorded, lies around 285 metres to the east, hinting that this part of Limerick once held a denser pattern of enclosed settlement than the present pastoral landscape suggests.
By the early 2000s, the earthwork had become tree-planted, which is how it appears on aerial photographs taken in September and October 2002 by the Archaeological Survey of Ireland, and on later orthoimage surveys carried out between 2005 and 2018. That ring of trees, visible from above, is now one of the clearest indicators of the monument's outline. The site is in private pasture, so access would require landowner permission. Visitors with an interest in early medieval landscape patterns might find it worth cross-referencing the aerial imagery, freely available via Google Earth, with the 1897 OS map to trace how the earthwork has changed over the intervening century.