Ringfort (Rath), Ballyvockoge, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
A low grass-covered ring in a Limerick pasture does not announce itself with drama.
The earthen bank enclosing this rath at Ballyvockoge is barely knee-high on the inside, rising to roughly seventy centimetres on the exterior, and yet what it outlines is a domestic world that would have been entirely recognisable to an early medieval Irish farming family. Ringforts, known in Irish as raths when they are earthen rather than stone-built, were the standard farmstead enclosures of early Christian Ireland, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Thousands survive across the country in varying states of preservation, but most people pass them without a second glance, mistaking the subtle humps in a field for nothing more than uneven ground.
This particular example sits on a south-facing slope in an area of outcropping limestone, a detail that tells you something about how carefully such sites were chosen. A southerly aspect meant warmth and shelter; proximity to limestone often meant well-drained, workable ground. The enclosure itself is nearly circular, measuring 28.3 metres north to south and 29.1 metres east to west, which is broadly typical for a single-family rath. What makes it more interesting than a plain ring are two linear earthen banks that project outward from the main enclosure, one abutting the bank at the north and extending for approximately twenty metres, the other at the southwest and running for roughly twenty-four metres. These annexe-like features may have provided additional enclosure for livestock or defined an outer yard, a common enough arrangement but one that gives this site a slightly more complex footprint than a simple ring. The record was compiled by Denis Power and uploaded in August 2011.
The site is under grass throughout, with the exception of some bushes growing along the top of the bank at the southeast. A farm passageway runs along the eastern side of the bank, which means the enclosure edge is reasonably approachable from that direction, though the land is actively farmed pasture and any visit would require the landowner's permission. The limestone outcrops in the surrounding area are worth noting as you approach; they give the landscape a particular texture that helps explain why early settlers chose this exact patch of ground. The banks are subtle enough that they reward slow walking rather than a quick glance from a distance, and the projecting linear features to the north and southwest become clearer once you understand what you are looking at.