Ringfort (Rath), Listellick, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ringforts
In the townland of Listellick, in County Kerry, a ringfort sits in the landscape doing what ringforts across Ireland have done for well over a thousand years: quietly persisting.
Known in Irish as a rath, a ringfort is a roughly circular enclosure defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, built primarily during the early medieval period, between roughly the fifth and twelfth centuries, and used as a farmstead and place of protection for a family and their livestock. Ireland contains tens of thousands of them, yet each one represents a specific choice made by specific people about where to live, how to organise a household, and how to read a particular patch of ground.
Listellick is a small townland lying to the north of Tralee, in a part of Kerry that was densely settled during the early medieval centuries. The broader region around Tralee Bay preserves a considerable concentration of earthwork monuments, and a rath in Listellick would fit into a wider pattern of agricultural and social organisation characteristic of that era. The rath was likely the home of a farming family of modest but independent means, the sort of household that appears throughout the annals and law texts of early Christian Ireland as the backbone of rural life. Beyond its presence in the landscape and its classification as a rath, the documented detail for this particular site is thin.