Ringfort (Rath), Farranamranagh, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Ringforts
In the townland of Farranamranagh, in County Kerry, a ringfort sits quietly in the landscape, its earthen banks tracing a boundary that was already ancient when the Normans arrived in Ireland.
These circular enclosures, known variously as raths or ringforts depending on their construction, were the most common form of rural settlement in early medieval Ireland, built roughly between 500 and 1000 AD. They served as farmsteads, their raised banks and ditches marking the boundary between a family's domestic space and the wider world, sometimes enclosing a house, outbuildings, and animals. Thousands survive across the country, yet each one occupies a specific piece of ground chosen for reasons that made sense to the people who built it, whether for drainage, visibility, or proximity to good land.
Farranamranagh as a place-name has the feel of older Irish geography, the kind of townland designation that preserves a fragment of meaning long after the context has dissolved. Kerry has an unusually dense concentration of ringforts relative to its size, a reflection of the province of Munster's considerable population and agricultural activity during the early medieval period. Many Kerry raths survive in reasonable condition because the land they occupy proved inconvenient to plough or develop, leaving the earthworks more or less intact over the centuries. The rath at Farranamranagh belongs to this quiet category of survivor, present in the record but not yet accompanied by detailed excavation reports or extensive documentary history.
