Souterrain, Ardogelly, Co. Sligo

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Settlement Sites

Souterrain, Ardogelly, Co. Sligo

Beneath a field in Ardogelly, County Sligo, there may be a souterrain that nobody can see.

The ground gives nothing away. No hollow sound underfoot, no tell-tale depression, no stone lintel edging out of the soil. What persists instead is local tradition, the kind that tends to outlast the physical evidence, insisting that somewhere inside this rath there is, or was, an underground passage.

A rath is a ringfort, one of the most common archaeological monuments in Ireland, typically a raised circular enclosure defined by an earthen bank and ditch, used as a farmstead during the early medieval period, roughly between the fifth and twelfth centuries. Souterrains are underground stone-lined tunnels or chambers associated with these settlements, thought to have served as cold storage, places of refuge, or both. Their presence inside a rath is not unusual in itself, but at Ardogelly the souterrain exists, as far as anyone can tell, only as a memory carried in local knowledge. Whether the structure collapsed long ago, was filled in, or simply lies too deep for surface traces to register, no remains are visible at ground level.

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