House - medieval, Dublin South City, Co. Dublin
Co. Dublin |
House
Somewhere beneath the streets and footpaths of Dublin's south city, a medieval house has effectively ceased to exist above ground, leaving only a catalogue entry as evidence that it was ever there.
It appears in the archaeological record not as a ruin or a preserved foundation, but as a reference, a single line in a survey, which puts it in the company of dozens of urban medieval structures that the city has quietly absorbed over centuries of rebuilding and expansion.
The sole documentary trace of this structure comes from Bradley and King's 1987 survey of Dublin's medieval remains, where it is recorded at volume three, page 195, as entry number 132. John Bradley and Ann-Marie Kehoe King were among the principal researchers working to catalogue the surviving and formerly surviving evidence of medieval Dublin during the 1980s, a period when urban archaeology in Ireland was gaining serious institutional attention, partly in the aftermath of the controversies surrounding Wood Quay. The house itself is given no further description in the available notes, which means its form, its date within the medieval period, and its original occupants are unknown from what survives in accessible records. Medieval urban houses in Dublin ranged from modest timber-framed structures to more substantial stone-built dwellings, depending on the wealth of the occupant and the period of construction, but nothing here confirms which kind this was.
There is nothing to see at this location in the conventional sense. The record states plainly that there is no visible surface trace, which means no wall stub, no exposed foundation, no interpretive panel. For anyone interested in the archaeology of medieval Dublin, that absence is itself worth sitting with. The south city preserves relatively little of its pre-modern built fabric above ground, and sites like this one, known only through scholarly catalogues, are a reminder of how much of the medieval city persists only as a coordinate and a footnote. If you are curious about the broader context, the archives of the National Monuments Service and the published volumes of the Urban Archaeological Survey of Ireland are the natural next step, offering at least the skeletal documentation that keeps such places from disappearing entirely from the record.