Ringfort (Rath), Lahard, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ringforts
On a gently sloping pasture field in Lahard, Co. Kerry, there is a ringfort that you cannot actually see.
No bank rises from the grass, no ditch catches the eye; the site is effectively invisible at ground level. What confirms its existence is a nineteenth-century map, specifically the 1846 Ordnance Survey six-inch sheet, which records a circular enclosure roughly twenty metres in diameter. A curving field boundary that still respects the site to its south and northwest may be the ghost of an outer bank, the land quietly holding the memory of a boundary that the soil has long since swallowed.
A rath is an early medieval enclosed farmstead, typically a circular area defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, used for settlement and the protection of livestock. This one at Lahard may be one of a pair. In the 1940s, a local account recorded in the Schools Manuscript for Co. Kerry described two raths sitting in the same field on Kelly's farm, positioned about two hundred yards apart. One was called "very big" with "two earthen circular rings", suggesting a bivallate structure with concentric enclosures; the other was described simply as a "single ring fort". If the Lahard site is indeed the smaller of the two, its companion rath, recorded separately, would have been the more substantial feature. Whether either survives as anything more than a crop mark or a cartographic footnote is, in itself, a quietly telling detail about how much of early Irish settlement has dissolved back into the ground without ceremony.