Ringfort (Cashel), Dowra, Co. Cavan
Co. Cavan |
Ringforts
A raised circular platform sits quietly in the landscape near Dowra in County Cavan, its outline still legible despite centuries of weathering and neglect.
What remains is a low, much-eroded drystone wall enclosing a roughly circular interior some 28.6 metres across, the kind of structure that rewards a careful eye rather than a casual glance. This is a cashel, a term for a ringfort built from stone rather than the earthen banks more commonly associated with the type, and it belongs to a category of monument found across Ireland in the hundreds, most of them dating broadly to the early medieval period.
What makes this particular example quietly interesting is its absence from the historical record in a very literal sense. When the Ordnance Survey mapped this part of Cavan in 1836, the site did not appear on the sheet, and the same was true when surveyors returned in 1876. That kind of omission is not unusual for smaller or heavily degraded monuments, but it does suggest the cashel was already so reduced by the nineteenth century that it failed to register as a distinct feature worth marking. The probable original entrance, facing roughly north-west, is detectable more through inference than obvious physical evidence, which speaks to just how thoroughly time and perhaps stone-robbing have worked on the fabric of the place.