Ringfort (Rath), Lismeelcunnin, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
Sometimes the most telling thing about a ringfort is what is no longer there.
On a south-facing slope above the Brogeen River valley in Lismeelcunnin, County Cork, a rath once stood, a roughly circular earthen enclosure of the kind that thousands of early medieval farming families built across Ireland as enclosed farmsteads. This one has been levelled. What remains is, in a sense, a social fossil: a field boundary to the east curves deliberately around the former site, as though the farmer who drew that line still knew, or felt, that something had been there and quietly worked around it. That boundary wall, standing about 1.1 metres high, may itself incorporate the last remnant of the original earthen bank.
The site was already gone by the time anyone wrote it down in any detail. When the first Ordnance Survey mapped this part of Cork in 1842, it was recorded as a hachured circular enclosure, the standard cartographic shorthand for a raised or defined earthwork, with a diameter of approximately 40 metres. By 1934, the antiquarian Bowman noted it in print as a levelled, single-ramparted fort of around 32 yards across, sitting on land then belonging to a J. Kelleher. A single rampart was the most common form of rath, a simple bank and outer ditch enclosing a domestic space. The fact that it was already described as levelled nearly a century ago means the earthwork had likely been cleared for agricultural use sometime in the nineteenth century, a fate that met a great many of Ireland's estimated 40,000 or so ringforts during the clearances and improvements of that era.
What is quietly strange about a place like this is that the absence itself has a shape. The curving field wall does not lie in a straight line for convenience; it bends, and that bend is the trace of something older. For anyone walking the pasture above the Brogeen valley, there is nothing dramatic to see, but the ground carries its own geometry if you know to look for it.