Staigue Fort

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Staigue Fort
Irish: An Stéig

County Kerry

Staigue Fort.jpg
Staigue Fort
Type: Ring fort
Location
Grid reference: V61056330
Location: 51°48’18"N, 10°-0’56"W
History
Built Iron Age
Information

Staigue or Staig is a ruined stone ringfort eleven miles west of Sneem, on the Iveragh Peninsula of County Kerry. The fort is thought to have been built during the late Iron Age, probably somewhere between 300 and 400 AD, as a defensive stronghold for a local lord or king.[1]

It is at the head of a valley opening south to the sea, surrounded by a ditch over 26 feet wide and at present 6 feet deep.[2] The fort's walls are up to 18 feet high in places, 13 feet thick at the bottom and 90 feet in diameter. The inside is reached through a 1.8m passage roofed with double lintels. Staigue represents a considerable feat in engineering and building. It was built without mortar, using undressed stones.[1] Vertical joints visible in the wall show that gaps were left during the building of the wall to allow access and were filled in later. There is also a tapered, lintelled doorway. Inside is an elaborate network of stairways leading to terraces and corbelled cells in the wall reached by passages.[2]

There is evidence that copper was excavated in the surrounding area and it appears to be a place of worship, an observatory and a place of defence.[1]

Outside links

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References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Noonan, Damien (2001). "Castles & Ancient Monuments of Ireland", Arum Press. ISBN 1-85410-752-6
  2. 2.0 2.1 Weir, A (1980). Early Ireland. A Field Guide. Belfast: Blackstaff Press. p. 164.