10.01.2014 Views

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

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

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

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.

Cork<br />

property boundaries were aligned east-west to the main north-south medieval street and<br />

were built using a variety <strong>of</strong> methods using post-and stake-holes and stave-built fences set in<br />

base plates.<br />

An early twelfth century stave-built fence was excavated immediately north <strong>of</strong> Tuckey Streeta<br />

laneway situated just <strong>of</strong>f the eastern side <strong>of</strong> South Main Street (O’Donnell 2003, 13-16).<br />

<strong>The</strong> fence was probably part <strong>of</strong> an original property division as it was aligned east-west and<br />

ran roughly along the same line as late medieval property boundaries at Christchurch (Cleary<br />

1997, 26-100). <strong>The</strong> stave-built fence consisted <strong>of</strong> twenty vertical timber planks set in an oak<br />

base plate. Timbers from the fence were felled sometime between A.D. 1115 and 1122.<br />

Two possible fence/property divisions or house walls were uncovered in a small excavation at<br />

No. 5 Barrack Street on the South Bank (Lane & Sutton 2003, 9-12). <strong>The</strong> structures were<br />

associated with layers <strong>of</strong> compacted organic material containing late eleventh/early twelfthcentury<br />

pottery. Two timbers from the second fence/wall produced felling dates <strong>of</strong> A.D.<br />

1014±9 and 1061±9.<br />

An excavation was undertaken at 11-13 Washington Street in the backyard <strong>of</strong> houses fronting<br />

onto South Main Street (McCutcheon 2003, 45-54). <strong>The</strong> lowest twelfth-century deposits<br />

contained an east-west earth-fast post and stave fence which may have functioned as a<br />

boundary plot fronting onto South Main Street. Six east-west aligned stake-holes roughly<br />

parallel to the fence were also uncovered and may represent an earlier boundary or internal<br />

backyard division.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Phase 2 twelfth/mid thirteenth-century deposits revealed an east-west ditch- 5m wide at<br />

ground level, 1.2m wide at the base and 1.03m deep- containing organic inclusions, a stick<br />

pin, iron needle, bone and shell. Two parallel east-west rows <strong>of</strong> oak staves and posts- one<br />

row driven through the fills at the ditch edge- were also uncovered. <strong>The</strong> ditch possibly<br />

drained the site while the two fence lines may have served as boundary divisions fronting<br />

onto South Main Street (Fig. 70).<br />

An excavation at the junction <strong>of</strong> South Main Street (40-48) and Old Post Office Lane adjacent<br />

to the South Gate Bridge revealed a series <strong>of</strong> east-west Type 1 and 2 structures and possible<br />

property divisions (Ní Loingsigh 2003 & 2005). <strong>The</strong> houses were built three deep to the east<br />

<strong>of</strong> the main medieval street (South Main Street) and the publication <strong>of</strong> this site may shed<br />

important light on the organization <strong>of</strong> property boundaries in Scandinavian Cork.<br />

Another recently excavated site at 35-39 South Main Street (Kelleher 2004) uncovered<br />

pathways, track-ways and boundary fences associated with several phases <strong>of</strong> Hiberno-<br />

Scandinavian buildings which fronted onto the main medieval thoroughfare. One <strong>of</strong> the plot<br />

divisions was located along the line <strong>of</strong> an earlier late eleventh/early twelfth-century timber<br />

revetment (Kelleher 2004).<br />

Hurley (2003c, 153) has suggested that the late medieval property boundaries in Cork may<br />

have consisted <strong>of</strong> rows <strong>of</strong> buildings with different specific functions- residential/trade streetfronting<br />

house, sleeping chamber middle house and a hall for dining and residential use at<br />

the rear. Evidence for a ranking <strong>of</strong> buildings was uncovered in eleventh/twelfth-century<br />

Waterford where Type 1 houses fronted the street with Type 2 to the rear. A similar pattern<br />

<strong>of</strong> Type 1 and 2 houses fronting the main medieval street has been revealed at Hanover<br />

Street/South Main Street, Cork (Cleary 2003, 31-44; Hurley 2003a, 158) and could indicate<br />

the presence <strong>of</strong> a burgage plot.<br />

142

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

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!