Ringfort, Knockranny, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Ringforts
In the rough pasture above Knockranny, a circular enclosure sits on a low rise with a quiet authority that the surrounding landscape seems to have spent centuries trying to absorb.
This is a cashel, a type of ringfort defined by a stone wall rather than an earthen bank, and what survives here is a sod-covered stony scarp roughly twenty metres across, still standing to a height of around 1.4 metres on the north side and slightly higher, at 1.6 metres, on the south. Cashels of this kind were built throughout early medieval Ireland, typically as enclosed farmsteads for a single family or small community, and while thousands survive in varying states of preservation, this one at Knockranny has been quietly negotiating its survival with the working landscape around it for a long time.
The evidence of that negotiation is written into the structure itself. Along the western to northern arc, a later field wall has been built directly on top of the ancient scarp, borrowing its mass rather than going to the trouble of building from scratch. Someone at some point also quarried out a nine-metre section of the south-eastern arc, removing usable stone from a monument that had probably been forgotten as anything other than a convenient source of material. At the north-east, the original basal courses of the cashel wall are still visible in place, one of the few spots where the structure reads clearly as what it always was. The interior is level but uneven underfoot, scattered with stones, and at the centre there is a dense, moss-and-sod-covered concentration of material whose character is not entirely clear. A stream runs about 200 metres to the south, a detail that would have mattered considerably to whoever first chose this spot.
The wider setting reinforces just how long this corner of Mayo has been worked and divided. The terrain around the cashel is broken up into a network of small fields separated by drystone walls and dotted with field clearance heaps, the accumulated result of generations of farmers moving stones off ground they wanted to use. The cashel sits within all of this, half-consumed by a dense thicket of blackthorn on its north-western arc, its wall cannibalised, its interior mossy and ambiguous, and yet still legible as a circle, still occupying its rise, still looking out over a landscape it predates by more than a thousand years.