Souterrain, Portersize, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Settlement Sites
Somewhere beneath the fields at Portersize in County Kildare, there may or may not be a souterrain. That ambiguity is, in its own way, the most interesting thing about it. A souterrain is an underground stone-lined passage or chamber, typically associated with early medieval settlement in Ireland, and usually built to serve as a place of refuge, storage, or both. The one at Portersize leaves no visible trace on the surface at all, which puts it in a peculiar category: a structure whose existence is documented, but whose current state is entirely unknown.
It came to light during quarrying in the nineteenth century, when the removal of stone or soil exposed what was evidently an underground feature. Beyond that, the record goes quiet. No subsequent investigation appears to have settled the question of what happened next. Whether the passage or chamber was destroyed in the course of the quarrying, or whether it was simply sealed off and left undisturbed beneath whatever lies above it now, remains unclear. It is the kind of site that raises more questions than it resolves, sitting somewhere between discovery and disappearance.