Road - gravel/stone trackway - peatland, Lullymore, Co. Kildare
Co. Kildare |
Roads & Tracks
Preserved beneath the bogland at Lullymore in County Kildare lies a road that almost nobody has walked in centuries. Stretching sixty-three metres through the peat, it measures less than a metre wide and sits barely four centimetres below the surface, a narrow corridor of sandstone flags laid close together with quiet precision, as though the builder expected only one person at a time to pass.
Peatland roads of this kind, sometimes called toghers, were a practical solution to the problem of crossing boggy ground in early Ireland. The bog, which preserves organic material with remarkable fidelity, has kept this trackway largely intact. The flags themselves are regular in size, each reaching up to thirty centimetres in width and around three and a half centimetres deep. What makes this particular example quietly interesting is the presence of a single small split oak timber found alongside the stonework. Stone and timber were occasionally combined in bog road construction, with timber sometimes used to stabilise or edge a surface, though here only that one fragment survives. Whether it is a remnant of a more extensive wooden element or simply an incidental piece is not something the evidence resolves.
