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EMAP_Progress_Reports_2009_2.pdf - The Heritage Council

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Offaly<br />

pins (ninth/tenth century date) and stick pins. <strong>The</strong>re were also many items of personal<br />

adornment, including beads, bone combs, pins and bone cylinders (and some bone gaming<br />

pieces). Clothing included leather shoes and textiles, found outside the palisade. Tools or<br />

agricultural equipment included knives, shears and spade (found outside the palisade),<br />

wooden spindles, mallets and wedges, as well as wooden buckets, lathe-turned vessels and<br />

wooden troughs. <strong>The</strong>re were also fragments of eight rotary querns and two whole lower<br />

stones from querns. Swords were found outside the palisade, spearheads were recovered<br />

from the lake muds and there was also an iron shield boss. Intriguingly, there were also some<br />

modern forgeries from the site, inspired by antiquarian interest in it in the nineteenth century<br />

and the presence of an iron ladle, iron anvil and a soldering iron suggests that some were<br />

even being produced on the site.<br />

<strong>The</strong> early medieval crannog at Ballinderry crannog No. 2 was probably occupied by fairly<br />

wealthy inhabitants in both its sixth century and ninth century phases, people who had<br />

access to high-status metalwork, glass and amber and were themselves engaging in a small<br />

amount of metalworking, woodworking and perhaps textile production. <strong>The</strong> crannog may not<br />

have been re-constructed many times before its abandonment. <strong>The</strong> economy of site was<br />

reconstructed from the faunal assemblages. <strong>The</strong>re were several rotary querns, suggesting the<br />

importance of tillage and arable crops. A large assemblage of cattle bone was taken to<br />

indicate the importance of grazing, pig and horse bones were also plentiful. <strong>The</strong>re may have<br />

been some limited hunting of wild animals, but there seems to have been relatively little<br />

exploitation of wildfowl or fish.<br />

Fig. 252. Plan of Ballinderry crannog No. 2, Co. Offaly (after Hencken 1942, pl. IX).<br />

536

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