House - indeterminate date, Springtown, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
House
In Springtown, County Longford, there is a place where a building once stood, and now nothing marks it at all.
Not a wall, not a foundation course, not even a faint shadow in the grass. What was recorded in 1998 as a possible house site has since slipped entirely below the threshold of visibility, leaving behind only a set of measurements and a grid reference to suggest it ever existed.
The site sits within the north-eastern quadrant of a rath, the kind of detail that places it in a long tradition of domestic life in early medieval Ireland. A rath is a roughly circular earthwork enclosure, typically defined by a bank and ditch, that served as a farmstead for a family of some local standing. People lived and worked inside these enclosures for centuries, and it was not uncommon for a house to occupy a specific quadrant of the interior in a fairly deliberate arrangement. The structure noted here was subrectangular in plan, meaning something between a rectangle and an oval, and measured approximately eight metres north to south and between 2.8 and four metres east to west. Those proportions suggest a modest but functional building. Beyond that, the date remains entirely open; the record offers no period, no artefacts, no further clues.