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

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Dublin<br />

‘Mount Offaly’, Cabinteely, Co. Dublin<br />

Early Medieval Settlement-Cemetery & Possible Later Ecclesiastical Site<br />

Grid reference: O23302420 (32330/22420)<br />

SMR: DU026-119<br />

Excavation Licence No: 98E0035<br />

Excavation duration: February – August 1998<br />

Site director: M. Conway (Margaret Gowen and Co. Ltd.)<br />

Excavation in advance <strong>of</strong> the construction <strong>of</strong> an Esso service station revealed a large multi-phase<br />

enclosed cemetery (Fig. 133). <strong>The</strong> site remains undated but it probably originated during the late Iron<br />

Age. It is difficult to determine when it fell out <strong>of</strong> use. It appears that the cemetery began as an<br />

ancestral burial place and was then taken over by the Church. <strong>The</strong> large number <strong>of</strong> internments<br />

suggests it was utilised over many centuries, and potentially into the later middle-ages. <strong>The</strong> burial<br />

ground contained 1553 burials as well as disarticulated remains and charnel pits. Settlement, on the<br />

site or in the vicinity, was evident by numerous dress items, functional objects, imported pottery,<br />

butchered animal bone and areas <strong>of</strong> cobbling. Evidence for industry included a furnace and<br />

associated hearth. Excavation only revealed a section <strong>of</strong> the site and further burials and features<br />

undoubtedly lie outside the excavated area.<br />

Twenty individuals were associated with the first burial phase at Mount Offaly. <strong>The</strong>y were all<br />

extended W-E inhumations and were well-spaced and consistently aligned on the same axis. No<br />

grave-goods or finds were associated with this phase, which remains undated, but the cemetery<br />

probably originated during the late Iron Age (see below).<br />

Phase II included 48 burials. Conway associates the inner ditch with this phase but it may have been<br />

constructed for the first phase <strong>of</strong> internment. A bone pin was retrieved from the primary fill and E<br />

ware, dating between the mid-sixth and seventh centuries, came from a secondary fill. A 6.5m stretch<br />

<strong>of</strong> the ditch was filled with dark occupation soil and included a large quantity <strong>of</strong> butchered animal<br />

bone and a double-sided bone comb. Further animal bone and E ware fragments were identified in<br />

the upper fill. <strong>The</strong>refore, the ditch was open prior to the mid sixth or seventh centuries. Also, the site<br />

name suggests the former presence <strong>of</strong> a mound and this is strengthened by accounts <strong>of</strong> a mound on<br />

the site in the early twentieth century. Based on evidence from many other mound, or ferta, sites and<br />

settlement-cemeteries, Mount Offaly probably originated during prehistory and most likely in the Iron<br />

Age.<br />

During Phase III, the inner ditch was back-filled and burials extended over this area. At least 120<br />

individuals were buried during the third phase. <strong>The</strong> cemetery expanded as far as the second or<br />

middle ditch which was between 2m and 3.5m further east <strong>of</strong> the original enclosure.<br />

<strong>The</strong> numbers interred within the confines <strong>of</strong> the middle enclosure ditch greatly increased during<br />

Phase IV. A further 262 individuals were buried and some <strong>of</strong> the third-phase graves were re-opened<br />

to accommodate further burial. <strong>The</strong> ditch produced less domestic waste than its predecessor. Its<br />

upper fill contained butchered animal bone and numerous small finds including a rare sherd <strong>of</strong> D ware<br />

which dates to the sixth century. Part <strong>of</strong> the newly expanded enclosure remained burial-free during<br />

Phases III and IV which suggests the former presence <strong>of</strong> a structure or perhaps some form <strong>of</strong> activity<br />

that left no trace archaeologically.<br />

<strong>The</strong> cemetery expanded in size again during Phase V to incorporate further burial. <strong>The</strong> middle ditch<br />

was filled-in and a third, and final, outer enclosure was created. It was positioned between 8m and<br />

9m east <strong>of</strong> the former middle enclosure and its fill was mostly sterile apart from numerous stones. At<br />

least 424 burials and a unique charnel pit were associated with Phase V. <strong>The</strong> latter contained at least<br />

three individuals and the bones were carefully and deliberately positioned around a millstone base.<br />

Potential settlement evidence was identified and included several areas <strong>of</strong> cobbling, significant<br />

deposits <strong>of</strong> butchered animal bone, domestic waste and small finds. Iron working was also present. A<br />

furnace and associated hearth were built over the former middle ditch and they contained dump<br />

deposits and ironworking debris including large amounts <strong>of</strong> slag and several iron objects.<br />

265

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