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

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Cork<br />

Fig. 71: Hanover Street/South Main Street, Cork, Level 1 (after Cleary 2003, 33).<br />

<strong>The</strong> remains <strong>of</strong> at least seven Type 1 houses and one definite Type 2 were identified. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

were typically rectangular with rounded corners in shape and contained central hearths and<br />

internal divisions and doorways in the shorter end walls, with one exception. Finds associated<br />

with the buildings included bone combs, carved and lathe turned wooden artefacts, stick pins,<br />

a scale balance and pans, a barrel padlock and keys, crucible fragments, a net sinker, fishing<br />

line weights, leather shoes, hone-stones and a late eleventh/twelfth century pottery<br />

assemblage.<br />

A series <strong>of</strong> east-west aligned Hiberno-Scandinavian type houses were excavated on reclaimed<br />

ground on the east side (35-39) <strong>of</strong> South Main Street (Kelleher 2004). <strong>The</strong> buildings belonged<br />

to Wallace’s Type 1 structures and contained post-and-wattle walls with rounded corners with<br />

doorways all in the shorter side walls. Two Type 1 houses were also excavated towards the<br />

medieval street front along the modern South Main Street. <strong>The</strong> buildings were associated<br />

with pathways, track-ways and boundary fences.<br />

Early- Mid Eleventh Century Stave-Built Buildings<br />

<strong>The</strong> remains <strong>of</strong> two rectangular stave-built structures were uncovered towards the eastern<br />

side (15) <strong>of</strong> South Main Street and represented either two successive houses or two phases<br />

<strong>of</strong> a house built on the same plot (Hurley & Trehy 2003, 29-30). <strong>The</strong> latest house fronted<br />

onto the medieval street and consisted <strong>of</strong> a north-south row <strong>of</strong> seven vertically set earth-fast<br />

staves supported at the base by a row <strong>of</strong> stones. A vertically-set earth-fast post defined the<br />

southern limit <strong>of</strong> the stave wall and was identified as a possible door jamb. <strong>The</strong> northern limit<br />

<strong>of</strong> the wall was represented by a single vertical post and two east-west aligned staves which<br />

formed part <strong>of</strong> the return wall <strong>of</strong> the building. <strong>The</strong> overall width <strong>of</strong> the structure was<br />

estimated to be 6.32m which would place the structure in the larger range <strong>of</strong> excavated<br />

twelfth-century buildings in Cork and Waterford. Dendrochronological dates from the timbers<br />

<strong>of</strong> the building centred on A.D. 1131-32. <strong>The</strong> structure appears to have replaced an earlier<br />

building <strong>of</strong> similar construction and <strong>of</strong> roughly the same size represented by six poorly<br />

preserved staves and two rectangular posts. <strong>The</strong> two vertical posts were recorded at the<br />

north and south ends <strong>of</strong> the stave-built wall and corresponded to the location <strong>of</strong> the door<br />

jamb and north corner post <strong>of</strong> the Phase 2 house.<br />

Mid-Eleventh Century Type 6 Sill-Beam Buildings<br />

145

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