Souterrain, Bullaun, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Settlement Sites
Beneath the western half of a ringfort at Bullaun in County Galway, a narrow underground passage opens up, then stops.
A displaced roof lintel has left a small gap, just wide enough to peer through, revealing that the far end has fallen in on itself. It is, in the most literal sense, a dead end, and yet that partial collapse is what makes the structure oddly compelling. The rest of it remains intact enough to measure, to study, and to wonder about.
A souterrain is an underground stone-built passage or chamber, typically associated with early medieval ringforts across Ireland. They were used variously for storage, refuge, or as a means of concealed escape. The example at Bullaun follows a straightforward east-west alignment. A rectangular hollow, 6.8 metres long and 2.9 metres wide, leads westward into a shorter drystone-built passage, just 1.5 metres in length, which is now inaccessible. Drystone construction means the walls and roof were laid without mortar, relying instead on careful placement and the weight of the stones themselves, a technique that has kept many such passages intact for over a thousand years. This one very nearly survived intact, and the collapse at the western end may be relatively recent in geological terms. The ringfort it sits within, recorded as GA057-058, is the kind of enclosed settlement that formed the basic unit of early medieval rural life in Ireland, a low circular earthen bank enclosing a farmstead and its inhabitants.