Ringfort (Rath), Callow, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
There is a particular category of historical site that exists most completely on paper.
At Callow in County Limerick, a ringfort, or rath, an enclosed circular dwelling typical of early medieval Ireland in which a low earthen bank defined a farmstead and its occupants' social standing, survives only as a mark on an old map. By the time anyone thought to look closely at the ground, there was nothing left to find.
The 1841 Ordnance Survey six-inch map recorded the site clearly: an embanked circular enclosure roughly twenty metres in diameter, sitting on an east-facing slope among outcrops of limestone in what was then, and apparently remains, rough pasture. That mid-nineteenth-century survey captured thousands of such monuments across Ireland at a moment when many were already under pressure from land clearance and agricultural improvement. When Denis Power inspected the Callow site, his findings were unambiguous: the monument had been levelled, with no trace evident on the ground. His record was uploaded in August 2011, a quiet note of absence in a national database.
For anyone curious enough to seek this spot out, it lies in an area of rough limestone pasture in Co. Limerick, and the terrain itself, with its exposed rock and uneven grazing land, still carries the texture of a landscape that has not been heavily reworked. What you will not find is any visible earthwork. The interest here is of a different order, less about what can be seen and more about what the 1841 map preserves as evidence: a community record of a feature that local people in the 1830s and 1840s still recognised as something worth drawing. The surveyors mapped it; later agricultural activity erased it. The limestone outcrops remain, the slope remains, and the six-inch map, widely available through the historical mapping archives at osi.ie, shows exactly where the enclosure once sat.