Building, Dublin South City, Co. Dublin

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Utility Structures

Building, Dublin South City, Co. Dublin

Sometimes the most tantalising entries in the historical record are the ones that tell you almost nothing.

Somewhere in the south city of Dublin, a stable once stood, and we know this only because a seventeenth-century surveyor thought it worth writing down. That single detail, lodged in a document compiled during one of the most turbulent periods in Irish history, is all that remains of whatever structure once occupied this unspecified patch of ground.

The reference comes from the Civil Survey of 1654 to 1656, a massive administrative undertaking carried out under the Cromwellian regime in Ireland. Its purpose was practical and unsentimental: to catalogue land, ownership, and buildings across the country in order to facilitate the redistribution of property following the wars of the 1640s. The survey was edited and published by Robert C. Simington in 1945, and it is in his edition, at page 223, that this particular mention of a stable appears. Beyond that, the record is silent. No owner is named in connection with the structure, no dimensions are given, and crucially, no precise location is recorded. It is simply there, a stable, somewhere in Dublin's south city, noted and then left to disappear.

Because the site is not precisely located, there is nothing to visit in any conventional sense. What the record offers instead is a small prompt to think about how much of the built environment of early modern Dublin has vanished without leaving any physical trace, surviving only in survey entries like this one. If you are moving through the older streets of Dublin's southside, particularly around areas with pre-eighteenth-century street patterns, it is worth bearing in mind that the ground underfoot has its own layered past, most of it unannounced. The Simington edition of the Civil Survey remains accessible through larger reference libraries and is a rewarding document for anyone interested in what Dublin looked like in the decade before the Restoration.

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Dublin South City, Co. Dublin
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