Ringfort (Rath), Cooleenaree, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
What makes this ringfort in Cooleenaree quietly interesting is not any single dramatic feature but rather the combination of things that have happened to it over time, and the one thing hidden beneath it that has not.
Sitting on a north-facing slope in pasture, the roughly circular enclosure measures around 34 metres in diameter, its earthen bank and external fosse, the shallow defensive ditch that would once have ringed the outer edge, now partly obscured by generations of field clearance. Farmers have piled stone and debris along the surviving bank and tipped the same material into the fosse, so the monument has become a convenient boundary marker as much as an ancient structure. Underneath all of that, however, is a souterrain, an underground passage or chamber of the kind commonly built within Irish ringforts, likely used for storage, refuge, or both.
Ringforts are among the most numerous archaeological monument types in Ireland, built mainly during the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries, as enclosed farmsteads for individual families or small communities. This one carries a local name recorded by Broker in 1937: 'Cuil Fort', from the Irish meaning a corner or recess, which suggests it retained a presence in local memory well into the twentieth century even as its physical fabric was being quietly dismantled by agricultural use. A second ringfort of the same general type sits in view roughly 200 metres to the east, a reminder that these enclosures were rarely entirely isolated, often clustering in landscapes that were densely farmed and settled in early medieval times.