Souterrain, Rinbrack, Co. Mayo

Co. Mayo |

Settlement Sites

Souterrain, Rinbrack, Co. Mayo

Beneath the townland of Rinbrack in County Mayo, there is a souterrain, an ancient underground stone-lined passage or chamber, typically built during the early medieval period in Ireland as a place of refuge, storage, or concealment.

These structures were usually constructed by roofing over a trench with large lintels and then covering the whole with earth, leaving little or nothing visible at the surface. That near-invisibility is part of what makes them quietly remarkable: a community's deliberate effort to leave something functional hidden just below the ground.

Souterrains are found across Ireland in considerable numbers, most often associated with early medieval settlement sites such as raths or cashels, the enclosed farmsteads that were the dominant form of rural habitation from roughly the sixth to the twelfth centuries. Their precise purposes are still debated, though cool storage for dairy produce and short-term refuge during raids are the explanations most commonly advanced. The one at Rinbrack is recorded as a monument, placing it within a broader pattern of such features across Connacht, where the landscape holds many traces of that period of settlement, most of them unannounced and easy to pass without noticing.

Rated 0 out of 5

Visitor Notes

Review type for post source and places source type not found
Added by
Picture of Pete F
Pete F
IrishHistory.com is passionate about helping people discover and connect with the rich stories of their local communities.
Please use the form below to submit any photos you may have of Souterrain, Rinbrack, Co. Mayo. We're happy to take any suggested edits you may have too. Please be advised it will take us some time to get to these submissions. Thank you.
Name
Email
Message
Upload images/documents
Maximum file size: 100 MB
If you'd like to add an image or a PDF please do it here.

Advertisement