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

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Cork<br />

Raheens I, Co. Cork<br />

Early Medieval Settlement Enclosure<br />

Grid Ref: W76566358 (176569/063589)<br />

SMR No: CO087-047<br />

Excavation Licence: N/A<br />

Excavation Duration/year: June - November 1989<br />

Site Director: A.M. Lennon (University College Cork)<br />

Two enclosures, 400m apart, were excavated in Raheens townland in advance <strong>of</strong> an<br />

industrial development. Raheens I was recorded on the First Edition <strong>of</strong> the Ordnance Survey<br />

6” maps, although it appears to have been subsequently levelled in the nineteenth century.<br />

<strong>The</strong> excavation revealed two concentric ditches enclosing two round houses, a scatter <strong>of</strong><br />

postholes and stakeholes and one large pit as well as some peripheral activity to the west <strong>of</strong><br />

the site. Phasing <strong>of</strong> the site was impossible as extensive modern ploughing activity had<br />

removed all occupation debris and truncated almost all the features (Fig. 81).<br />

An isolated stone-lined pit and a scatter <strong>of</strong> post and stakeholes and other pits were excavated<br />

to the west <strong>of</strong> the enclosure. One line <strong>of</strong> stakeholes appears to have functioned as a small<br />

wind-break while a trench containing several stakeholes and two pits had another possible<br />

structural purpose. <strong>The</strong> lack <strong>of</strong> occupational debris from these features suggests that they<br />

were temporary structures and do not represent external habitation sites. <strong>The</strong> features also<br />

had a close stratigraphic relationship to the enclosing ditch suggesting that they may have<br />

been associated in some way with the construction <strong>of</strong> the enclosure ditches.<br />

<strong>The</strong> site contained two concentric ditches, set 4.0m apart, which had diameters <strong>of</strong> 34m<br />

internally and 45m externally. <strong>The</strong>re was no direct evidence for associated banks. Two<br />

sections through the outer ditch revealed that it was U-shaped in pr<strong>of</strong>ile and measured up to<br />

1.9m deep and 2.20m wide at the surface; and the sections through the inner ditch revealed<br />

it was almost bowl-shaped in pr<strong>of</strong>ile and measured up to 1.6m deep and 3.0m wide at the<br />

surface. Both ditches appear to have remained open for a period <strong>of</strong> time before being finally<br />

deliberately in-filled. One fragment <strong>of</strong> a sheep/goat horn core was found inside a fill in the<br />

inner ditch.<br />

A gradually curving U-shaped trench (0.50m deep and 1.80m wide at the surface) was<br />

identified immediately inside the inner enclosing ditch along its western side. <strong>The</strong> trench was<br />

excavated extending along the inner perimeter <strong>of</strong> the ditch for a distance <strong>of</strong> 18m and was<br />

never no more than 1.0m from it. It was tentatively interpreted as a slot beam trench which<br />

may have held uprights for a wooden palisade along the western side. A dump <strong>of</strong> charcoal<br />

and heat-shattered stones containing several sherds <strong>of</strong> an unglazed possible early medieval<br />

French ware were recovered in one <strong>of</strong> the upper fills <strong>of</strong> the trench and suggest that this<br />

‘backfill took place in either the last stages <strong>of</strong> occupation or after the site was abandoned’.<br />

<strong>The</strong> large cutting in the interior <strong>of</strong> the site revealed that the internal features had been<br />

heavily truncated due to extensive modern ploughing activity. Several dug features were<br />

identified but the lack <strong>of</strong> occupation deposits made stratigraphic associations impossible. A<br />

square shaped pit (2m by 2m, and 0.80m deep) was excavated close to the inner ditch and<br />

contained within its fills a considerable amount <strong>of</strong> charcoal, animal bone fragments, a<br />

perforated hone stone and an iron knife blade. Two post-pits were situated in the western<br />

corners <strong>of</strong> the pit and may have provided some form <strong>of</strong> superstructure for this possible<br />

storage pit.<br />

<strong>The</strong> principal internal features were the two round houses. House 1 and House 2 measured<br />

5m and 6m in diameter respectively and appear to have been principally constructed using<br />

slot-trenches and double lines <strong>of</strong> stakeholes. <strong>The</strong> entrances to House 1 and House 2 were<br />

along the southern and south-eastern sides. No indications <strong>of</strong> a hearth or internal supports or<br />

divisions were uncovered in either structure though these were probably destroyed by recent<br />

ploughing activity.<br />

174

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