Souterrain, Lugalisheen, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Settlement Sites
Beneath the townland of Lugalisheen in County Mayo, there is a souterrain: an underground stone-lined passage or chamber, built by hand and buried from view, whose precise condition and dimensions remain largely unrecorded in any publicly available form.
These structures are among the more quietly mysterious features of the Irish landscape. Typically constructed during the early medieval period, between roughly the seventh and twelfth centuries, souterrains were built in association with settlements and ringforts, and are thought to have served as places of refuge, cold storage, or both. They could run for several metres underground, sometimes branching into multiple chambers, with corbelled or lintelled roofs supporting the earth above.
Lugalisheen is a small townland in Mayo, a county with no shortage of early medieval archaeology, and the presence of a souterrain there points to a settled community that invested considerable effort in its construction. The work involved quarrying, hauling, and laying stone without mortar in a confined underground space, which suggests the structure had real practical value to those who built it. Beyond the fact of its existence and location, the detailed record for this particular site has not yet been made publicly available, which means the specifics, including its length, state of preservation, and any associated surface features, remain outside what can be reliably reported here.