IRISH 
                SWEATHOUSES
                AND THE GREAT FORGETTING 
                
              
                Anthony Weir
               
              
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              Are 
                Irish sweathouses a continuation of a prehistoric tradition of 
                inhaling consciousness-altering smoke, recently overlaid or amalgamated 
                with the prophylactic function of saunas ?
                Cannabis is not likely 
                to have been used in Ireland for a millennium at least, but a 
                much more seriously-numinous means of widening the awareness is 
                still to be found all over the island: Psilocybe semilanceata, 
                or "magic mushrooms"
              Could 
                the sweating cure possibly be a purifying ritual preceding 
                psychedelic experience ?
                
               
              
              Killadiskert, 
                county Leitrim
              
                Irish Sweathouses are small, rare, beehive-shaped, corbelled structures 
                of field-stones, rarely more than 2 metres in external height 
                and diameter, with very small "creep" entrances which 
                may have been blocked by clothing, or by temporary doors of peat-turves, 
                or whatever came to hand. Most of those which survive could not 
                have accommodated more than three or four sweaters. They resemble 
                the small 'caves', built into banks, in which many Irish natives 
                were reported to live in the seventeenth century.
              Some have chinks 
                to let out the smoke, but they were necessarily cleared of fire 
                and ash before use - so any chinks (deliberate or otherwise) in 
                the rough construction would have served as ventilation ducts 
                in a cramped space. Where these were too big, they were stopped 
                with sods or with mortar.
              
                
                
                Cornamore, county Leitrim
              
                They were often covered with sods of earth to counterweight and 
                stabilise the corbelling, and these would also have acted as insulation 
                after firing. That they were fired is certain, for soot remains 
                on the ceilings of some. 
              Thus they are different 
                from North American sweat-lodges or inipis, which were 
                rarely if ever stone-built, and were heated by carrying hot stones 
                from a nearby fire. Northern European saunas and bath-houses are 
                a modern variant, with an enclosed stove upon or around which 
                stones were placed. Stone retains heat very well.
              
                
 
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              Cleighran More, county Leitrim: beside a 
                stream 
               
 
              
              Dowra, county Leitrim.
              
                The first - and only detailed - account of Irish sweathouses came 
                from Latocnaye in the late eighteenth century: a man who spoke 
                no Irish. [A Frenchman's Walk Through Ireland, translation 
                reprinted by Blackstaff Press, Belfast 1984]. 
                The rural Irishry who used them would not necessarily have told 
                such a man - or any Dubliner, Anglo-Irishman or Englishman in 
                a carriage - what functions the sweathouses served. To this day, 
                the rural Irish of the west (like peasants everywhere) will tell 
                tourists what they think they want to hear, halving distances 
                so as not to discourage the traveller, and enthusiastically recommending 
                the nearest café. Nevertheless, reports of the Sweating 
                Cure have been given in recent times to Brian Williams of 
                the Archæological Survey of Northern Ireland, by people 
                who are unlikely to have heard of it from the archæological 
                literature, or from outside their immediate area.
              
              
              
                
                Ballydonegan, county Derry: also beside 
                a stream
               
                A number of early writers on the Turkish bath quote the following 
                from Catharine Gage, wife of the Reverend Robert Gage of Rathlin 
                Island (between county Antrim and the Mull of Kintyre in Scotland), 
                who wrote:- 
              
'Small buildings 
                called sweat-houses are erected, somewhat in the shape of a beehive, 
                constructed with stones and turf, neatly put together; the roof 
                being formed of the same material, with a small hole in the centre. 
                There is also an aperture below, just large enough to admit one 
                person, on hands and knees. When required for use, a large fire 
                is lighted in the middle of the floor, and allowed to burn out, 
                by which time the house has become thoroughly heated; the ashes 
                are then swept away, and the patient goes in, having first taken 
                off his clothes, with the exception of his undergarment, which 
                he hands to a friend outside. The hole in the roof is then covered 
                with a flat stone and the entrance is also closed up with sods, 
                to prevent the admission of air. The patient remains within until 
                he begins to perspire copiously, when (if young and strong) he 
                plunges into the sea, but the aged or weak retire to bed for a 
                few hours.' 
              [Gage: A History of the Island of Rathlin, 1851]
              He also mentions 
                that young women use it for their complexion after burning kelp, 
                and that after about 30 minutes use, their skin is much improved. 
                
              There 
                is very little mention of sweathouses on the Web, apart from a 
                summary of conclusions from a rescue-dig at Rathpatrick, 
                county Kilkenny - whose author, knowing little about steam baths, 
                saunas, or simple physics (or indeed about the sparse literature 
                on the subject of Irish sweathouses), actually thinks that pouring 
                water on hot stones increases the temperature! This summary suggests 
                that temporary sweathouses of the North American type (made of 
                bent wands and skins or fabric), with a pool, might well have 
                existed in Ireland during the Bronze Age - around 2,500 BCE. The 
                only problem is that the report suggests that stones were heated 
                in a hearth a couple of metres outside the temporary sweathouse, 
                a labour-intensive operation, since it would be easier and safer 
                to erect the structure over the hot stones in a hearth than to 
                roll very hot (presumably rounded) stones down into what amounts 
                to a tent. The author of the summary suggests, however, that they 
                might have been carried on forked sticks. A correspondent from 
                Rhode Island tells me that he and his friends use a shovel - or 
                preferably a pitchfork - to transport glowing stones into the 
                inipi. and that there are reports of deer-antlers also 
                being used. "The stones are commonly the size of a man's 
                head and never gathered from or near a river - because they explode."
              
                Presumed 
                sweathouse, Rathpatrick - Headland Archaeology Ltd.
              
                Whether or not the temporary Rathpatrick structure was a place 
                to sweat in, no stone-built sweathouse standing today is likely 
                to be earlier than the second part of the 19th century, because 
                of the fragility of the structures. If indeed they were built 
                at that time for prophylactic use or to ease rheumatic pain, then 
                (unless they were a curious 19th-century fad introduced by an 
                eccentric) they very likely had an earlier - and more effective 
                - function.
              The first thing 
                to note is that the present distribution is in the poorest parts 
                of the ignored counties of Ireland: Fermanagh, Leitrim and Cavan, 
                as well as northern Sligo - though 'outliers' have been identified 
                in Wicklow, Cork and Kerry.
              
              Coomura, county Kerry (photo by Aidan Harte)
               
                
                They are often tucked away in rather magical, liminal places, 
                near little streams and/or in little brakes or copses. This differentiates 
                them from lime-kilns (also common in central Leitrim and NW Cavan) 
                which have a similar construction but are much taller, more easily 
                accessible - and have even-smaller "entrances" which 
                only a stoat or a small dog could get through.
              
              A typical lime-kiln of NW Cavan - with missing 
                chimney.
              
                The inhabitants of this area were until very recently amongst 
                the poorest and most undernourished in Europe. They lived on potatoes 
                and whey, never saw fruit, and after the Famine of the 1840s brought 
                a continuing revulsion against the eating of anything wild and 
                natural (e.g. blackberries and elderberries, let alone sloes, 
                wild damsons, rose-hips, chickweed, nettles, sea scurvy grass, 
                mushrooms etc.) had almost no variety of diet. Healthy pre-Famine 
                infusions gave way to a dependence upon strong imported tea laced 
                with imported, addictive and teeth-rotting sugar: expensive items 
                which allowed little cash for real nourishment in a largely-subsistence 
                society where great labour was required simply to provide fuel 
                for winter.
              
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                for a closer view 
                
 
              
              Mullan, county Fermanagh
              
                Sweathouses were carefully built, often corbelled, but sometimes 
                slab-roofed, well away from permanent dwelling-houses and often 
                from tracks. They would have had to be tucked away from the eyes 
                of land-agents who might have charged rent on them. But they could 
                have been close to impermanent dwellings, such as bivouacs of 
                tarpaulin or rags and sticks, or the "cabins" of wattle 
                and daub which give their name to county Cavan. It would have 
                taken two or three skilled wall-builders two days to find and 
                select the stones and build one. Some townlands (named 
                units of land of very variable size usually smaller than anEnglish 
                parish) had several sweathouses, and even now three of four townlands 
                have more than one sweathouse, intact or ruined.
              The corbel-roofing 
                goes back, of course, to prehistoric times, and is found in Neolithic 
                tombs all over Europe. It involves the laying of stones in an 
                ever-diminishing coil or spiral until it can be finished with 
                a single stone.
              
                
               
 
                Corbel-roofed 'oratory'
                on Skellig Michael, county Kerry
                [click 
                on the picture to see clocháns on the rock]
                
                Corbel-roof of prehistoric tomb,
                Knowth, county Meath 
                
                
              
                All sorts of corbelled rustic 
                structures (mostly dating from the 19th century) can still be 
                seen across Europe, with functions as various as hen-houses, dog-kennels, 
                look-outs, shepherds' huts and stores. There 
                are hundreds in the French département of the Lot 
                and adjacent départements of Quercy-Rouergue, where 
                they are known as gariotas 
                when small, and caselas or cabanas when larger.
                
              
              Corbelled shepherd-hut, Artajona (Navarra), 
                Spain
                and a gariota or casela in Quercy, France. 
                
              
               
                
                They all, however, have proper doorways, unlike the diminutive 
                entrances of Irish sweathouses. These required considerable labour 
                to heat. One report says that two donkey-cartsful of turf 
                (which is what peat is called in Ireland) was required to get 
                the stones to a high enough temperature for the sweating - and 
                this is probably correct. In a society where not everyone had 
                rights of turbary (the cutting of peat), and turf was burned in 
                an open hearth, piece by frugal piece, this was quite an extravagance. 
                Turf-digging is labour enough, but the throwing of it up the turf-bank, 
                the stacking in small piles to dry in a wet climate, and its transportation 
                to the dwelling-house still takes a several weeks of the summer, 
                and still many Irish men working in Britain will come home in 
                the summer to help with the turf. The prodigal use of it to heat 
                up a sweathouse, presumably well away from the dwelling, suggests 
                that sweathouses were in some way very important.
              
                
 
              
              Legeelan, county Cavan
              
                
 
                
                photo by Padraig Cumiskey - 
                click to enlarge
              
              Doolargy, county Louth (one of several)
              
                
              Parsons Green, South Tipperary
               
              
              Parke's Castle, county Sligo
               
              