Ringfort (Rath), Kilmalin, Co. Wicklow
Co. Wicklow |
Ringforts
A low oval ring in the Wicklow landscape, barely knee-height in places, is easy to mistake for a natural undulation in the ground.
But the earth and stone bank at Kilmalin has a deliberate shape: an oval roughly 24 metres across at its longest point, sitting on a gently south-facing slope on what was once a carefully chosen natural platform. What makes it quietly puzzling is the absence of features that normally help archaeologists read a site. There is no visible entrance gap, no fosse (the encircling ditch that typically accompanies such a structure), and no trace of anything that once stood inside.
The site is a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, the most common type of early medieval settlement monument in Ireland. Ringforts were generally built between roughly 500 and 1000 AD as enclosed farmsteads, their banks and ditches marking out a family's living space and providing some degree of protection for people and livestock. At Kilmalin, the bank itself survives at between 1.3 and 1.9 metres wide, and between a quarter and half a metre high, which suggests considerable erosion or robbing of material over the centuries. What does survive in better condition are remnants of the stone revetting on both the inner and outer faces of the bank, particularly at the north-east and west, where large stones set up to 2 metres apart still indicate how the original structure was built. Revetting, the lining of an earthen bank with stone to stabilise and retain it, points to a degree of construction effort that the bank's current modest appearance does not immediately suggest.
