Ringfort (Rath), Pallas (Connello Upper By.), Co. Limerick
Co. Limerick |
Ringforts
A circular earthwork sits quietly in a field near Pallas in the barony of Connello Upper, County Limerick, its outline still readable in the landscape despite being well over a thousand years old.
What makes it worth attention is the combination of its modest but measurable preservation and its almost accidental survival, tucked into working farmland where it continues to serve, in a loose sense, as a boundary feature.
This is a rath, the Irish term for a ringfort, which was the most common form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, typically dating from roughly the fifth to the twelfth centuries. They functioned as enclosed farmsteads, the earthen banks and ditches surrounding a family's dwelling and perhaps some livestock. The Pallas example takes the form of a circular enclosure roughly 37 metres in diameter. Its boundary is defined by a scarped edge, meaning the ground has been cut away to create a steep face, standing around 0.65 metres high and nearly 2 metres wide. Beyond that lies an external fosse, a drainage or defensive ditch, approximately 1.25 metres deep and 3 metres wide. These are not dramatic dimensions, but they are legible, and the ditch in particular suggests some deliberate effort at either defence or water management. A modern field boundary runs along the northwestern to eastern side of the enclosure, which is a common fate for these monuments; farmers across centuries have found it convenient to use the existing earthwork as a ready-made division between plots.
The interior tells two stories depending on which half you are looking at. The southern portion is under rough pasture and therefore relatively open, giving a reasonable sense of the level ground within. The northern half, however, has been taken over by dense overgrowth, making it difficult to read. The site sits on a gentle slope facing southeast, which would have been a practical choice for an early medieval farming family, offering some shelter and decent light. The record was compiled by Denis Power and uploaded in August 2011. Access is across private farmland, so any visit would require the landowner's permission; the earthwork itself is not signposted or managed as a public amenity, which is true of the vast majority of the estimated 45,000 or so ringforts recorded across Ireland.