Ringfort (Rath), Coolanagh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
A rath sitting in open pasture on a south-east-facing slope in Coolanagh, County Cork, is not unusual in itself; there are thousands of these early medieval earthwork enclosures scattered across Ireland.
What makes this one quietly compelling is the particular combination of features that have survived together in the same small area: an earthen bank, a hidden underground passage, and a standing stone, each belonging to a different layer of human activity on the same patch of ground.
The enclosure measures roughly 35 metres north to south, defined by an earthen bank reaching about 1.3 metres in height along its eastern and southern sides, with a shallow external fosse, or ditch, running around the outside. Raths of this type were typically built during the early medieval period, functioning as enclosed farmsteads for a family of some local standing. The interior here has been planted with conifers, which can obscure the original ground surface, but beneath or within that interior lies a souterrain, an artificially constructed underground passage or chamber built from stone. Souterrains are a recurring feature of Irish raths and were most likely used for cold storage, refuge, or both. To the west of the enclosure stands a separate standing stone, a much older monument of prehistoric date, its presence suggesting that this slope had some significance to people long before the rath was built around it.