Souterrain, Castle Ffrench, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Settlement Sites
Beneath the southern half of a grass-covered ringfort in County Galway, local tradition insists there is a tunnel.
It runs, people say, towards the centre of the enclosure. No one has found the opening. No depression marks the ground, no stonework breaks the surface, and yet the story persists, attached to a place that already carries the quiet weight of considerable age.
The ringfort at Castle Ffrench sits in undulating grassland and measures roughly thirty metres across. A ringfort, in simple terms, is a roughly circular enclosure defined by an earthen bank and sometimes a ditch, used as a defended farmstead during the early medieval period in Ireland. Here, the enclosing bank of earth and stone survives best along the south-western to north-western arc, though it is heavily overgrown. Where the bank has degraded elsewhere around the circuit, a natural or constructed scarp takes over the work of defining the boundary. Outside the bank runs a fosse, the external ditch that would originally have added both practical defence and a clear sense of boundary to the site. The underground passage that local memory associates with this interior is what archaeologists call a souterrain, a stone-lined or rock-cut tunnel built beneath or adjacent to a ringfort, typically used for storage, refuge, or both. Whether one genuinely exists here remains unconfirmed; the tradition is noted, but the ground gives nothing away.
The site is in fair condition overall, which in the context of a field monument of this kind means it has survived without major destruction, even if time and vegetation have blurred its edges considerably. The most legible part of the monument today is the western and north-western stretch of the bank, where the earthwork is clearest beneath the overgrowth. Visitors approaching across the grassland should look for the subtle rise of the enclosing element and the slight hollow of the fosse beside it, keeping in mind that the most-discussed feature, the supposed tunnel, leaves no trace whatsoever on the surface.