Ringfort (Rath), Knappoge, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ringforts
Something about this circular earthwork near Knappoge makes it difficult to read, and that difficulty is itself the point.
What survives on a south-westerly facing slope above the River Shannon is a raised area roughly 42.7 metres in diameter, ringed by a bank of earth and stone that looks, disconcertingly, rather new. There is an external fosse, the term for the ditch that typically runs outside the bank of an early medieval enclosure, but the original entrance has been lost entirely, leaving no obvious way in or out and no clear orientation toward the landscape it once commanded.
The site appears on the 1837 edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, labelled simply as a circular enclosure with the designation "Fort", which suggests it was already a legible feature of the land nearly two centuries ago. It is almost certainly a rath, a type of enclosed farmstead built during the early medieval period in Ireland, typically defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches surrounding a central living area. Raths are among the most common archaeological monument types in the country, yet each one represents a particular household, a particular patch of ground, and a particular set of decisions about how to organise life within a defended perimeter. What makes this one harder to interpret is that it has been extensively modified at some point in more recent times, the low, narrow bank giving it an appearance quite unlike the profile one would expect of an undisturbed early medieval earthwork. Whatever reshaping occurred has effectively erased the evidence needed to understand the original structure.
The site is now densely overgrown with scrub, which both obscures the earthworks and, in a practical sense, makes any close inspection difficult. It sits in pasture not far above the Shannon, a position that would have offered its original occupants both access to water and a commanding view of the surrounding low-lying ground.