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

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Kerry<br />

Church Island (Ballycarbery West td., Valentia Island), Co. Kerry<br />

Early Medieval Ecclesiastical Settlement<br />

Grid Ref: V43057855 (043050/078550)<br />

SMR No: KE079-032<br />

Excavation Licence: 03E1518<br />

Excavation Duration/Year: Summer 1955; Summer 1956; 2004-05.<br />

Site Director: M.J. O’Kelly (University College Cork); Alan Hayden (Archaeological<br />

Projects Ltd.)<br />

Church Island is a very small island at the mouth <strong>of</strong> Valentia harbour on the northern side <strong>of</strong><br />

the Iveragh peninsula. <strong>The</strong> site is connected to the nearby island <strong>of</strong> Beginish by a sandbar at<br />

low tide. Excavations were undertaken over the course <strong>of</strong> two summers in 1955 and 1956 by<br />

means <strong>of</strong> a government grant and funds from University College Cork and revealed a series<br />

<strong>of</strong> early medieval churches, buildings, burials and an enclosing cashel with associated<br />

habitation and ironworking evidence (Fig. 167). Further excavations funded by the DoEHLG in<br />

2004-05 exposed an elaborate terraced shrine mound on a high rocky knoll on the island.<br />

Early monastic activity consisted <strong>of</strong> a wooden church and circular wooden hut; both probably<br />

contemporary with each other though there was no archaeological evidence to confirm this.<br />

<strong>The</strong> complete plan <strong>of</strong> the wooden church was not uncovered as the structure partly underlay<br />

the eastern part <strong>of</strong> the stone oratory. Five rock-cut postholes defined the line <strong>of</strong> the southern<br />

(3) and northern (2) side <strong>of</strong> a rectangular building (2m by 3m).<br />

<strong>The</strong> wooden church was aligned with thirty-three burials which lay to the west and<br />

northwest. Eleven <strong>of</strong> the burials partially underlay the foundations <strong>of</strong> the stone oratory and<br />

were therefore clearly earlier than this later structure. Two bodies were placed in cist-like<br />

structures <strong>of</strong> stone with the remainder (31) in simple unlined graves.<br />

Part <strong>of</strong> a circular wooden hut defined by an arc <strong>of</strong> stone slabs set on edge was uncovered on<br />

the western side <strong>of</strong> the circular stone house (1). <strong>The</strong> stones were deliberately set into the<br />

ground appear to have marked the limits <strong>of</strong> a roughly circular hut, approximately 6m in<br />

diameter which would have continued inside the area <strong>of</strong> the later stone house (Fig. 168).<br />

<strong>The</strong> area within the arc and between it and the round house contained a layer <strong>of</strong> primary<br />

habitation refuse containing charcoal, winkle, limpet shells, animal bone and a large quantity<br />

<strong>of</strong> iron slag. A possible furnace-base inside the area <strong>of</strong> the subsequent circular stone house<br />

belonged to the ironworking activity associated with the primary building. A refuse spread<br />

containing iron slag was also uncovered outside the arc and to the west and northwest <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

<strong>The</strong> second phase <strong>of</strong> monastic activity consisted <strong>of</strong> a rectangular stone oratory and a circular<br />

stone house. <strong>The</strong> stone oratory contained inclined dry-stone walls and a collapsed corbelvaulted<br />

ro<strong>of</strong> whose ridge was probably adorned by two stone finials recovered on the island.<br />

<strong>The</strong> oratory had original internal dimensions <strong>of</strong> 5.79m by 3.78m, and survived to a height <strong>of</strong><br />

3.3m. It contained a western doorway and two windows in the eastern and southern walls.<br />

<strong>The</strong> inner side <strong>of</strong> the western paved doorway was fitted with a ‘hinged’ door defined by a<br />

heel-stone and a posthole on its northern and southern sides respectively. A thin spread <strong>of</strong><br />

charcoal with a small quantity <strong>of</strong> periwinkle and limpet shells around its edge was uncovered<br />

in the interior’s centre and may represent the remains <strong>of</strong> a single meal cooked at the time<br />

when the oratory was built. <strong>The</strong> stone oratory was aligned with a group <strong>of</strong> six burials outside<br />

its east end and two burials mid-way along the external base <strong>of</strong> its north walls.<br />

<strong>The</strong> circular house (1) - internal diameter <strong>of</strong> 4.5m- contained stone walls surviving to a height<br />

<strong>of</strong> 3.1m and had a thatched ro<strong>of</strong> supported by twelve postholes evenly spaced around the<br />

floor area just inside the base <strong>of</strong> the wall. An arc <strong>of</strong> stonework, two to three courses high<br />

344

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