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

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Dublin<br />

century, was 2.5m wide and 0.45m high and may have had a pathway along its top. This was<br />

probably not a floodbank – unlike similarly dated banks from this period – because it was situated<br />

high above the Poddle. <strong>The</strong>refore, it possibly functioned as a town boundary (Walsh 2001, 97–8).<br />

A second bank was recorded at Exchange Street Upper/Parliament Street and was stratigraphically<br />

dated between the mid and late tenth century. It lay 14m closer to the river than the preceding bank<br />

– possibly to reclaim further space – and was composed <strong>of</strong> compact stony clay that was laid on the<br />

natural silt. It was 0.7m high and was between 3.1-3.7m in width (Gowen with Scully 1996, 15; Scally<br />

2002, 17–21). It was probably constructed to increase the amount <strong>of</strong> space in the north-eastern part<br />

<strong>of</strong> the town.<br />

By the middle <strong>of</strong> the century, the first bank at Ross Road was replaced and this possibly relates to the<br />

second bank at Exchange Street Upper/Parliament Street (Walsh 2001, 98). A third bank, which<br />

consisted <strong>of</strong> deposits <strong>of</strong> clay, silt, small stones and sods, was then placed over the previous bank<br />

which had burnt down. A fence was erected on the northern part <strong>of</strong> the site along the crest <strong>of</strong> Bank<br />

2. <strong>The</strong> burnt areas may relate to the historical accounts <strong>of</strong> the burnings <strong>of</strong> Dublin in AD 936 and 944<br />

and a mid to late tenth century date has been suggested for its construction (Walsh 2001, 101–2).<br />

Eleventh Century<br />

At Fishamble Street, a considerable bank was constructed with gravel, stone and earth and was<br />

reinforced with post-and-wattle screens (Wallace 1992b, 45). It was crowned with a palisade fence<br />

and probably relates to the banks below at Exchange Street Upper/Parliament Street and Ross Road.<br />

A third bank was constructed at Exchange Street Upper/Parliament Street but, unlike the previous<br />

two which acted as floodbanks, this was a substantial and defensive enclosure. It had a maximum<br />

width <strong>of</strong> 6.4m and was 1.2m high on the settlement side but was at least 2.3m in height on the<br />

eastern riverfront side (Gowen with Scully 1996, 17; Scally 2002, 21–5). <strong>The</strong> bank was constructed<br />

over Bank 2 and consisted <strong>of</strong> clays and much <strong>of</strong> the domestic waste, such as animal bone, from the<br />

preceding occupational layers. Dates <strong>of</strong> AD 900-1150 and AD 960-1020 were retrieved from the<br />

bank’s material and a date between the late tenth and early eleventh century has been favoured by<br />

the excavator.<br />

A similarly substantial bank at Ross Road – Bank 4 – replaced Bank 3 and was approximately 6m wide<br />

and over 4m high. <strong>The</strong> bank was probably mounted by a palisade trench and its form remained the<br />

same until the early twelfth century (Walsh 2001, 106). This bank formed the southern defence <strong>of</strong> the<br />

town and was similar in scale to the roughly contemporary banks in the north and north-east at<br />

Fishamble Street and Exchange Street Upper/Parliament Street respectively.<br />

A section <strong>of</strong> a pre-Anglo-Norman bank was identified below the Powder Tower in Dublin Castle along<br />

the south-eastern lines <strong>of</strong> the town. <strong>The</strong> bank was composed <strong>of</strong> clay and had a stone facing without<br />

mortar. It was 2.7m high and 2.6m wide. A later bank – revetted with timber – was also identified<br />

and consisted <strong>of</strong> refuse layers which were dumped over the earlier bank. <strong>The</strong>se banks have been<br />

dated to the tenth/eleventh centuries (Lynch and Manning 2001, 180, 182).<br />

Twelfth Century<br />

By the beginning <strong>of</strong> the twelfth century, a stone wall which was 1.5m wide and potentially up to 3.5m<br />

in height, was built along the earlier earthen embankment at Fishamble Street. It had a rubble fill<br />

with mortared stone facings and was not completely free standing (Wallace 1992b, 45). This wall is<br />

very similar to the late Hiberno-Scandinavian walls found at Essex Gate, Parliament Street and Ross<br />

Road (see below).<br />

At Essex Gate and Parliament Street, in the north-eastern part <strong>of</strong> Hiberno-Scandinavian Dublin, a<br />

substantial stretch <strong>of</strong> the defensive wall was detected (Scally 2002, 25–7). <strong>The</strong> wall, 1.48m high and<br />

1.4m wide, was constructed with square and rectangular blocks, which were secured with mortar,<br />

and had a rubble stone core. It was similar in form to the early twelfth century wall at Fishamble<br />

Street and Ross Road and this has led to its suggested date based on morphological similarities<br />

(Scally 2002, 27).<br />

252

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