Ringfort (Rath), Garranes, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
A low, circular swell rising from a working tillage field in County Cork is easy to mistake for a natural feature of the landscape, but the earthen bank encircling it is anything but accidental.
This is a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, the most common type of early medieval settlement monument found across Ireland. Thousands survive in varying states of preservation, yet each one carries the quiet weight of individual habitation, a place where a farming family or minor landowner once lived, kept livestock, and marked out their territory in soil and turf.
The Garranes example sits on a south-east-facing slope, a deliberate orientation that would have made practical sense for anyone building a home here, catching morning light and offering reasonable drainage. The raised interior measures 31.6 metres north to south, enclosed by an earthen bank that still stands 1.7 metres high on its outer face and around a metre on the inner side. A shallow ditch, known as a fosse, runs around the outside, reaching a maximum depth of half a metre. These features, bank and fosse working together, were the standard construction method: the material dug from the fosse was piled inward to build the enclosing bank, creating both a boundary and a modest defensive barrier. A gap in the bank to the south-east marks what was almost certainly the original entrance, aligned, like the slope itself, toward the south-east.