Ringfort, Irishtown, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
Ringforts
Beneath the domed interior of this D-shaped enclosure near Irishtown, local tradition insists there is an opening to a cave.
Whether the cavity exists, and what it might once have been, remains unverified, which is fitting enough for a site whose identity as a genuine ringfort is itself uncertain. A ringfort, in the usual sense, is a roughly circular enclosure defined by an earthen bank and ditch, used as a farmstead during the early medieval period. This site fits that description only loosely.
The enclosure sits on a ridge in grassland that slopes away to the north and south, giving it a commanding, if understated, position in the landscape. It measures approximately 47.5 metres east to west and is bounded partly by straight field fences, one running east to west at the northern side and another oriented north-north-west to south-south-east, both consisting of earth-covered stone walls. A curving fence of similar construction follows the northern, eastern, and southern arc. The interior ground rises in a gentle dome. Crucially, the feature does not appear on the 1837 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, which is an early and thorough record of the Irish landscape; its absence there raises a reasonable question about whether the earthwork is medieval in origin at all, or something more recent shaped by agricultural boundaries.
The label of doubtful antiquity sits honestly on this site. It occupies that slightly unsettling category of place that looks purposeful, carries a local legend, and yet resists easy classification. The cave tradition in particular belongs to a pattern found across Irish ringforts, where souterrains, underground stone-lined passages associated with early medieval settlement, have sometimes been remembered in folklore long after their entrances silted over or collapsed. Whether that is what lies beneath the domed interior here, or whether the whole enclosure is simply a field boundary grown atmospheric with time, is a question the site keeps to itself.
