Ringfort, Coolagary, Co. Offaly
Co. Offaly |
Ringforts
In the quiet landscape of Coolagary, in County Offaly, there is a place that is almost nothing at all, and that, in its own way, is the point.
A ringfort once occupied a slight rise of ground here, one of the thousands of circular enclosed settlements that were built across Ireland during the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. These earthen enclosures, bounded by banks and ditches, served as farmsteads for ordinary families as much as for local chieftains, and they are among the most common ancient monuments on the Irish landscape. This particular example, however, has been levelled entirely, leaving only the faintest outline of its former shape visible at ground level.
The survival rate of ringforts varies considerably across the country, and many have been lost to centuries of agricultural improvement, land clearance, and the general pressure of working the land. What remains at Coolagary is less a monument than a trace, the memory of an enclosure pressed faintly into the soil of a low rise. The site sits just perceptibly above the surrounding ground, which is often the only reason such outlines survive at all; slight changes in elevation affect drainage and vegetation in ways that can still be read from the right angle, or from above. Without that small topographical accident, even this ghost of a structure might have disappeared altogether.