Fort, Ballyleck, Co. Monaghan
Co. Monaghan |
Ringforts
On a low, unassuming spur of land in County Monaghan, a circular enclosure was carefully mapped by Ordnance Survey teams in 1834 and marked in gothic script as a fort.
Nearly two centuries later, the earthwork itself has all but vanished into the pasture. What remains is a flattened top to the rise, roughly twenty-one metres across, and the faint logic of a landscape that once made this small elevation worth enclosing.
The place sits on a gentle north-south ridge, with streams running parallel to it on both the western and eastern sides, converging around 250 metres to the north. That kind of positioning is characteristic of a ringfort, the most common surviving monument type in Ireland, typically a circular area enclosed by one or more earthen banks and ditches, used as a farmstead or dwelling during the early medieval period. The 1834 OS map recorded an embanked and overgrown enclosure with an external diameter of around twenty-five metres, already obscured enough by that point to suggest it had been out of use for some considerable time. By the time the site was assessed in more recent fieldwork, no visible earthwork could be detected above ground in the surrounding pasture, leaving only that curiously flat summit as a physical trace.