10.01.2014 Views

EMAP_Progress_Reports_2009_2.pdf - The Heritage Council

EMAP_Progress_Reports_2009_2.pdf - The Heritage Council

EMAP_Progress_Reports_2009_2.pdf - The Heritage Council

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Clare<br />

‘Thady’s Fort’ (Ballycally td.), Co. Clare<br />

Early Medieval Settlement Enclosure<br />

Grid Ref: R36546164 (136546/161642)<br />

SMR No: CL061-005<br />

Excavation Licence: N/A<br />

Excavation Duration/year: Spring 1959<br />

Site Director: E. Rynne (National Museum of Ireland)<br />

Thady’s Fort is a double banked enclosure with evidence for an internal wooden palisade, a<br />

rectangular building, areas of paving as well as fire-pits and postholes. <strong>The</strong> site was situated<br />

near the summit of Thady’s Hill, and was excavated by staff from the National Museum over<br />

the course of eight days in the spring of 1959 in advance of the construction of a new runway<br />

and landing strip at Shannon airport.<br />

<strong>The</strong> site contained two encircling banks with a wide ditch between them and a south facing<br />

entrance (Fig. 53). <strong>The</strong> enclosures were 57m by 61m externally (and approximately 30m<br />

internally). <strong>The</strong> southern entrance was splayed, and measured about 2m on the inside and<br />

3m on the outside.<br />

<strong>The</strong> inner face of the inner bank was strengthened with a stone revetment wall generally two<br />

courses high for most of the perimeter. Where this stone revetment was missing along the<br />

northern side, a trench (3.7m long, 0.6m wide and 0.3m deep) containing a linear spread of<br />

charcoal was uncovered. This was interpreted as a timber revetment or palisade,<br />

subsequently destroyed by fire.<br />

A shallow fire-pit (0.2m deep) was the only feature of interest in the limited excavations in<br />

the site’s eastern half. It abutted the revetment wall along the eastern perimeter of the<br />

enclosure. Two further fire-pits and a possible posthole were excavated near the centre of<br />

the site. One fire-pit and the possible posthole cut into the ‘old ground level’ though underlay<br />

a stony deposit.<br />

A rectangular stone-house (13.4m by 6.2m externally) was evident prior to excavation in the<br />

south-west quadrant. <strong>The</strong> walls survived to a height of 0.6m high and were 0.75m thick.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y were built of large generally rectangular dressed stones on the outer faces, with an<br />

inner core of small irregular stones. A continuous band of mortar was found on the interior<br />

walls suggests that it had been plastered. A shallow fire-pit full of burnt material and the<br />

remains of a possible chimney were excavated inside the structure. Two possible postholes<br />

were excavated inside the house with a further one identified outside; and an area of paving<br />

was also discovered outside the entrance.<br />

<strong>The</strong> foundation-walls of the house had much in common with that of medieval houses<br />

excavated at Caherguillamore, Co. Limerick. This, along with the recovery of a number of late<br />

medieval finds and pottery sherds suggest a late medieval date for the house. This dating is<br />

supported by the recovery of a number of stratified clay pipe bowls underneath the paving<br />

outside the entrance and among the fallen wall-stones.<br />

It cannot be established if this house post-dates, or is contemporary with, the enclosures.<br />

<strong>The</strong> excavator suggested that both the house and enclosure bank may have been<br />

contemporary for two reasons; the slip from the inner bank was against the outer face of the<br />

south-western wall of the house and not underneath it and because the western corner of<br />

the house was built upon the lowest levels of bank and not on top of slip from the wall. A<br />

number of finds from the enclosure, however, are associated with the early medieval period,<br />

e.g. a piece of sheet-bronze, four quern stone fragments, a whetstone and an iron knife with<br />

bone handle. A number of later finds (e.g. seven sherds of medieval pottery), some iron<br />

objects (e.g. a jaw’s harp) and three clay pipe-bowls, were also intermixed with these<br />

artefacts in contexts associated with the house and enclosure and suggest later disturbance<br />

on the site of an early medieval enclosure.<br />

96

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!