Ringfort (Rath), Lisheenroe, Co. Cork
Co. Cork |
Ringforts
A modern field boundary cuts straight through the interior of this early medieval enclosure, as though the past were simply another inconvenience to be partitioned off.
The ringfort at Lisheenroe sits on a south-facing slope in County Cork, just below the crest of a hill, and while it survives well enough to read clearly in the landscape, that intruding field division is a quiet reminder of how thoroughly farming has reorganised the Irish countryside around, and sometimes through, its older archaeology.
Ringforts, known in Irish as raths when constructed from earthen banks rather than stone, were the most common settlement type in early medieval Ireland, broadly dating from around the fifth to the twelfth centuries. They typically enclosed a single farmstead and its associated structures, with the encircling bank serving as much for status and the management of livestock as for any serious defence. The Lisheenroe example is a modest but legible specimen: a roughly circular area measuring 26 metres east to west and 25 metres north to south, enclosed by an earthen bank still standing to about a metre in height. A gap in the bank on the southern side likely marks the original entrance, a feature commonly preserved in surviving raths. The field boundary that now crosses the south-western interior has been levelled beyond the enclosure itself, suggesting it was pushed through at some point when the monument's edges were perhaps less carefully observed.