Ringfort (Rath), Garranereagh, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
What is striking about the ringfort at Garranereagh is how thoroughly ordinary its surroundings have become, and how thoroughly it has not.
A silage pit sits immediately outside its northern bank; a farm roadway skirts the eastern side. The working landscape has pressed right up against it, yet the fort itself remains largely intact, its earthen bank still rising to a height of 3.4 metres, enclosing a roughly circular area some 40 metres across. That bank is what defines a rath, the most common type of early medieval enclosure in Ireland, typically thrown up between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries as a defended farmstead for a single family or small community. The interior here is saucer-shaped, dipping slightly inward, which is characteristic of the form.
The entrance, 4 metres wide and oriented to the south-east, sits on the slope of a south-facing hillside to the north of the farmyard below. That placement is unlikely to be accidental. South-east-facing entrances are common in Irish ringforts and are generally thought to reflect a preference for morning light and shelter from prevailing westerly winds, practical considerations for people who kept livestock inside the enclosure at night. The bank itself, at over three metres high, would have presented a serious obstacle to raiders and wandering animals alike, its original profile probably sharper than what survives today after more than a millennium of weathering and grass growth.