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

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

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Kerry<br />

Cloghermore, Co. Kerry<br />

Cave<br />

Grid Ref: Q906128 (09060/11280)<br />

SMR No: KE030-068; KE030-069<br />

Excavation Licence: 99E0431<br />

Excavation Duration/year: August 1999; April-June 2000<br />

Site Director: M. Connolly (Kerry County Museum); F. Coyne (Aegis Archaeology<br />

Ltd.)<br />

A cave and D-shaped enclosure at Cloghermore revealed considerable early medieval<br />

funerary and burial activity associated with an eighth/ninth-century pagan Irish community<br />

and a late-ninth/tenth-century Scandinavian family. <strong>The</strong> excavations were undertaken in 1999<br />

and 2000 following the discovery <strong>of</strong> human remains inside the cave. <strong>The</strong> main excavated<br />

areas comprised trenches across the enclosure and around the cave entrance shaft as well as<br />

a series <strong>of</strong> excavated areas within the entrance passages and the two internal chambers<br />

(Figs. 171; 172).<br />

<strong>The</strong> cave consists <strong>of</strong> 375m <strong>of</strong> fossil passages situated under a large limestone reef (located<br />

now at 51m OD). <strong>The</strong> main entrance is through a narrow cleft on the northern side <strong>of</strong> the<br />

reef with two recorded chambers to the south- ‘Two-Star Temple’ and the ‘Graveyard’. A<br />

second unrecorded entrance was discovered at the southern terminal inside a D-shaped<br />

enclosure on the south-facing side <strong>of</strong> the reef. This enclosure consisted <strong>of</strong> a broad bank<br />

scarped out <strong>of</strong> the side <strong>of</strong> the reef which measured 16.8m by 28m internally, and 34.8m by<br />

44.80m externally.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was no clear stratigraphy within the cave which precluded the possibility <strong>of</strong> a detailed<br />

sequence <strong>of</strong> deposition within the cave. Both the ‘Graveyard’ and the ‘Two-Star Temple’<br />

chambers appear to have originally contained little or no sediment. A clay deposit was<br />

introduced into the cave (possibly in the second phase <strong>of</strong> activity) though minimal amounts<br />

were found in the deepest chamber (‘Two-Star Temple’) or the gallery connecting it to the<br />

‘Graveyard’. Two phases <strong>of</strong> burial were advanced though there was evidently a short span <strong>of</strong><br />

time between both with the possibility existing that the site was in continuous use in the<br />

period.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first phase <strong>of</strong> burial activity may date to the fifth century, but centres on the eighth/ninth<br />

centuries and was associated with the use <strong>of</strong> the use <strong>of</strong> the ‘Two-Star Temple’ and<br />

‘Graveyard’ chambers as ossuaries <strong>of</strong> a small pagan Irish population. <strong>The</strong> phase was<br />

characterised by the disarticulation and deposition <strong>of</strong> selected de-fleshed skeletal remains<br />

without artefacts upon the floor <strong>of</strong> the cave. <strong>The</strong> skeletal material were left exposed on the<br />

cave floor and spanned the early-fifth century to the ninth century (see below), and the<br />

earliest date stands alone and could possibly represent a very early usage <strong>of</strong> the cave. <strong>The</strong><br />

early burials from the ‘Graveyard’ were subsequently mixed together with the later burials<br />

from the ‘Two-Star Temple’ and produced radiocarbon dates from the seventh/ninth century.<br />

<strong>The</strong> second phase centres on the later-ninth/mid-tenth century, and is indicative <strong>of</strong> the use <strong>of</strong><br />

the cave by a small pagan community- possibly Scandinavian- consisting <strong>of</strong> at least four<br />

adults and three sub-adults with grave-goods as well as a possible cremation burial. It is<br />

characterised by the internment <strong>of</strong> complete bodies with artefacts and complex burial rites<br />

involving the cremation <strong>of</strong> animals and the internment <strong>of</strong> parts <strong>of</strong> horses. <strong>The</strong> clay appears to<br />

have been introduced in the second phase either to cover the burials inserted in the final<br />

phase <strong>of</strong> activity or to cover the earlier burials and provide a clean surface; all <strong>of</strong> the artefacts<br />

and most <strong>of</strong> the skeletal material were recovered from this deposit. It appears that the<br />

burials were disturbed or possibly intentionally desecrated at a later date, perhaps by the<br />

native population.<br />

351

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