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AR01055_EMAP_Gazetteer_of_Sites_4-2_10.pdf - The Heritage ...

AR01055_EMAP_Gazetteer_of_Sites_4-2_10.pdf - The Heritage ...

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Cork<br />

apart at one <strong>of</strong> the lowest levels excavated to date in Cork city. <strong>The</strong> revetment <strong>of</strong> vertically<br />

set round-wood and roughly split logs was dated by dendrochronology to A.D. 1104±9 and<br />

retained a clay platform 1.3m in height upon which a subsequent Hiberno-Scandinavian Type<br />

1 house (1124±9) was built (Kelleher 2002 & forthcoming; Hurley 2003a, 157-58).<br />

An excavation on the east side <strong>of</strong> South Main Street (35-39) uncovered two parallel east-west<br />

aligned timber revetments at the lowest levels (Kelleher 2004). <strong>The</strong> base <strong>of</strong> these revetments<br />

were driven into the natural clay and the ground behind was then artificially raised to a<br />

height <strong>of</strong> 1.5m by the introduction <strong>of</strong> locally derived clay. Dates were pending for the<br />

structure though it was expected to be late eleventh/early twelfth century. At least one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

revetments subsequently marked the line <strong>of</strong> a later plot division.<br />

An excavation was undertaken adjacent to the South Gate Bridge at the angle <strong>of</strong> the modern<br />

quay wall and South Main Street (Ní Loingsigh 2003). <strong>The</strong> natural bank <strong>of</strong> the River Lee<br />

sloped down to the South and was evident as a clay silt layer below the habitation evidence.<br />

<strong>The</strong> earliest feature consisted <strong>of</strong> massive oak ‘planks’ (0.4m by 0.15m by 1.4m minimum), set<br />

on edge and held in place by upright posts (0.34m by 0.16m by 1.4m minimum). <strong>The</strong><br />

structure stood to a height <strong>of</strong> 0.6m with both the upright and horizontal timbers extending<br />

down into the silty clay.<br />

<strong>The</strong> ground behind the revetment (i.e. to the north <strong>of</strong>) was consolidated by the introduction<br />

<strong>of</strong> approximately 1.56m <strong>of</strong> silt, clay and organic material. Finds from the clay behind the<br />

revetment included a barrel padlock key, a stick pin and sherds <strong>of</strong> Ham Green cooking ware.<br />

<strong>The</strong> uppermost part <strong>of</strong> the revetment was possibly braced by three horizontal north-south<br />

oak beams held in place by timber uprights situated on top <strong>of</strong> the introduced clays. <strong>The</strong><br />

timber base-pads <strong>of</strong> four upright posts, which may have supported a quayside structure or<br />

may be the foundations <strong>of</strong> a sill beam house, were also recorded. <strong>The</strong> early thirteenthcentury<br />

medieval city wall was exposed traversing the site on an east-west axis, 2m south <strong>of</strong><br />

the timber revetment.<br />

A further area at 40-48 South Main Street uncovered at its lowest levels an east–west<br />

boundary fence <strong>of</strong> upright timbers (felling date A.D. 1097/98) driven into the natural reed<br />

marsh. Local muds and clays were deposited on both sides <strong>of</strong> the fence to a height <strong>of</strong> 1.2m<br />

to create a dry platform upon which a series <strong>of</strong> Scandinavian post-and-wattle and timber<br />

framed houses were built (Ní Loingsigh 2005).<br />

A series <strong>of</strong> waterfront revetments were uncovered at an adjacent site between Grand Parade<br />

and South Main Street on the southern limits <strong>of</strong> the South Island (Sutton 2004). <strong>The</strong><br />

reclamation activity began in the late eleventh century at the western end <strong>of</strong> the site and<br />

extended eastwards over a 40 year period culminating in the enclosure <strong>of</strong> the southern<br />

perimeter <strong>of</strong> the island by timber revetments. Locally derived estuarine clays were dumped<br />

on either side <strong>of</strong> an un-braced east-west fence <strong>of</strong> cleft oak timbers and upright post- 1.5m<br />

average height- dated to AD 1100. <strong>The</strong> base <strong>of</strong> the fence timbers doubled as a property<br />

boundary and was driven into the natural muds. Similarly constructed north-south fences<br />

dated to c. A.D. 1123/1124 and retained a second phase <strong>of</strong> reclamation clays which raised<br />

ground levels to the west <strong>of</strong> the fences and were also deposited to the east as reclamation<br />

advanced eastwards (Sutton 2004). <strong>The</strong> original boundary was extended further eastwards in<br />

A.D. 1134/35 when an east-west fence <strong>of</strong> pointed and un-braced cleft timbers was built.<br />

A low stone bank defined the southern perimeter <strong>of</strong> the island. Associated with it was a crude<br />

timber revetment built to the south <strong>of</strong> the stone bank and dated c. A.D. 1143. Two<br />

subsequent parallel timber revetments were constructed further to the south and retained<br />

introduced muds. <strong>The</strong> most southerly revetment comprised up to two horizontal runs <strong>of</strong><br />

edge-laid planks, braced to the south by upright posts pegged into mortised base plates. It<br />

appears to have replaced the abutting revetment to the north in mid-twelfth century (A.D.<br />

1152 ± 9; A.D. 1166 ± 9). A timber jetty (10.2m long and surviving to a height <strong>of</strong> 1.8m)<br />

139

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