Ringfort (Rath), Lissaniska West, Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
What makes this particular earthwork quietly interesting is the contrast at its edges: the surrounding ground is marshy pasture, yet step inside the enclosure and the interior is level, dry, and largely clear of overgrowth.
That small domestic fact, a dry floor in a wet field, speaks to why people chose this spot in the first place, and why the form has endured.
A rath is a type of ringfort, the most common early medieval monument in Ireland, typically built between roughly 500 and 1000 AD as a defended farmstead for a single family and their livestock. This example in Lissaniska West sits on a slight south-facing slope and takes a roughly circular form with a diameter of approximately 35 metres. Its boundary is not uniform: the southwestern to northeastern arc is defined by an earthen bank, modest in scale with an internal height of around 0.45 metres and an external height of 0.8 metres, while the northeastern to south-southwestern arc uses a scarped edge, meaning the ground has been cut away to create a near-vertical face rather than a built-up bank. Around the full perimeter runs an external fosse, a defensive ditch, roughly 0.4 metres deep and 2.4 metres wide. The main entrance, at 2.2 metres wide, is oriented to the north-northwest, though numerous smaller gaps have opened up in the bank and scarped edge over the centuries. The survey was compiled by Denis Power and uploaded in August 2011.
The site sits in marshy ground, so footwear matters more than the modest scale of the earthworks might suggest. The entrance at the north-northwest is the clearest point of access, though the gap widths recorded in the survey indicate the boundary has eroded in several places, making the perimeter legible even where it is no longer intact. Once inside, it is worth pausing to take in the contrast between the damp field beyond and the dry, open interior, a small but telling detail about how early medieval farmers read and worked the landscape around them.