House - indeterminate date, Lynn, Co. Westmeath
Co. Westmeath |
House
Somebody, at some point after the medieval period, chose to build their home inside a ringfort.
That decision is the quiet puzzle at the centre of this site in Lynn, Co. Westmeath, where the grass-covered wall footings of a long rectangular structure sit within the circular earthwork enclosure of a much older monument. Ringforts, typically dating from the early medieval period, are circular or oval enclosures defined by an earthen bank and ditch, built to protect farmsteads and their livestock. They are common across the Irish countryside, but finding a later building planted deliberately in the middle of one is rather less so.
What survives at Lynn is modest but legible. The wall footings, roughly 2.3 metres wide and still standing about 0.35 metres above ground, trace out a building approximately 12.5 metres long and 6 metres wide, orientated on a north-north-east to south-south-west axis. Inside those walls, the usable space ran to around 10 metres by 3.5 metres, giving it the narrow, elongated proportions characteristic of post-medieval vernacular building in Ireland. Two opposing gaps in the east and west walls, each around 1.5 to 1.7 metres wide, are read as the probable remains of doorways, and it is this pairing of opposed entrances, combined with the building's long dimensions, that points towards a post-medieval date rather than anything earlier. A possible second structure may lie immediately to the east of the main building, suggesting this was not necessarily an isolated dwelling.
The relationship between the house and the ringfort beneath it raises questions that the visible remains cannot fully answer. The person or people who built here may have valued the ready-made enclosure, its raised bank offering shelter or a sense of boundary, without any particular awareness of or concern for what the earthwork had originally been. Or they may have known exactly what they were building inside. Either way, the layering of two quite different eras of occupation into a single patch of Westmeath ground gives the site an understated complexity that its low grassy profile does little to advertise.