House - indeterminate date, Cornadowagh, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
House
In the fields of Cornadowagh, County Longford, there is a house that has entirely ceased to exist above ground, yet whose location was recorded with enough conviction that it remains on the archaeological map.
What was noted in 1975 was a circular house site, the kind of dwelling associated with early medieval Ireland, positioned within the north-east quadrant of a rath. A rath is a ringfort, an enclosed farmstead typically defined by one or more earthen banks and ditches, and for centuries they were the most common form of rural settlement across the Irish countryside. That a house once occupied a specific corner of this one is a matter of record, even if the ground itself no longer shows it.
The detail that places this house in its proper context is its relationship to the rath. Circular houses built within raths were a familiar feature of early Irish rural life, though the precise date of this particular example remains unestablished. By 1975, when the site was formally noted, the house had already left only the faintest trace. At some point after that observation was recorded, even that trace disappeared. What remains is the rath itself, a separately catalogued monument, and the knowledge that its north-east quadrant once held a structure where someone lived, worked, and kept themselves out of the Longford weather.