Ringfort (Rath), Ardfert, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ringforts
On the edge of Ardfert in north Kerry, a broad circular earthwork sits slightly raised above the surrounding fields, its interior platform still visibly higher than the land around it.
That subtle elevation is one of the more telling signs that this is a ringfort, the kind of enclosed farmstead that was commonplace across early medieval Ireland but is rarely examined with much attention when it sits quietly in agricultural ground rather than on a dramatic hillside.
Ringforts, sometimes called raths when earthen in construction, were typically the enclosed homesteads of farming families in early Christian Ireland, roughly the fifth to twelfth centuries. This example is univallate, meaning it has a single line of defences: one earthen and stone bank, and one external fosse, which is the ditch dug to create and reinforce that bank. Here the bank rises around 1.4 metres above the interior and nearly three metres above the base of the fosse, which remains well defined at roughly 1.6 metres wide and 1.2 metres deep. The enclosure measures approximately 54 metres north to south and just under 49 metres east to west, making it a substantial example of its type. A 6-metre-wide entrance gap to the south-east appears to have been stone-lined, and the quantity of stones still visible in that sector suggests a stone causeway once spanned the fosse to reach it, though no causeway can be traced today. Inside, three low mounds survive, two near the centre and one towards the south-west, and these are thought to represent the footprints of former structures, most likely houses.
The three interior mounds are the quiet detail worth pausing over. Most ringforts that survive in the Irish countryside have had their interiors disturbed or levelled over centuries of farming, so the presence of distinguishable mound features, even eroded ones, offers a faint outline of domestic life that once occupied this space.
