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

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Kerry<br />

Coarhabeg, Valentia Island<br />

Early Medieval Unenclosed Settlement<br />

Grid Ref: V349758 (03490/07580)<br />

SMR No: N/A<br />

Excavation Licence: 94E0120<br />

Excavation Duration/year: September 1994<br />

Site Director: Alan Hayden (Archaeological Projects Ltd.)<br />

A small unenclosed early medieval clochán was excavated in Coarhabeg townland on Valentia<br />

Island just <strong>of</strong>f the southern tip <strong>of</strong> the Iveragh peninsula. <strong>The</strong> excavation was undertaken on<br />

behalf <strong>of</strong> and in conjunction with research by G.F. Mitchell <strong>of</strong> Trinity College Dublin in<br />

Valentia Island. <strong>The</strong> site was situated 500m from the coast in an area <strong>of</strong> cut-away bog in the<br />

vicinity <strong>of</strong> a late prehistoric landscape <strong>of</strong> field boundaries, huts and track-ways. St. Brendan’s<br />

Well and its stone crosses were also situated 500m to the north.<br />

<strong>The</strong> stone building survived as a 0.5m high rectangular mound with stones protruding<br />

through its capping <strong>of</strong> peat. Excavation opened an area measuring a maximum <strong>of</strong> 11.2m by<br />

10.2m, revealing a stone building consisting <strong>of</strong> three conjoined cells (Fig. 173). <strong>The</strong> walls <strong>of</strong><br />

two <strong>of</strong> the cells (1 and 2) were still visible in the northern half <strong>of</strong> the site though those <strong>of</strong> cell<br />

(3) in the southern half had completely collapsed. <strong>The</strong> interior and entrances <strong>of</strong> cells (1) and<br />

(2) were completely excavated; Cell 3 was cleared <strong>of</strong> peat but not further excavated.<br />

<strong>The</strong> dry-stone walls <strong>of</strong> the trapezoidal central cell (Cell 1) (maximum internal dimensions <strong>of</strong><br />

3.4m by 2.8m) survived to a maximum 2m wide and 1m high. A stone-lined hearth was<br />

revealed in the northwest corner <strong>of</strong> the cell. Large vertically set flat slabs faced the interior <strong>of</strong><br />

the wall in places and the entrance passage (2.6m by 1.2m). <strong>The</strong> entrance passage and the<br />

area immediately outside the entrance were paved with flat slabs. Spreads <strong>of</strong> ash occurred<br />

throughout the cell and to some extent in the entrance passage and on the paving outside<br />

the cell on its south and west sides. Fragmentary calcified animal and fish bones were found<br />

in the ash adjacent to the hearth with another small patch <strong>of</strong> animal bone recovered near<br />

where the entrance passage met the cell. <strong>The</strong> burnt material yielded a 2Σ calibrated date <strong>of</strong><br />

A.D. 562 to A.D. 758 (see below).<br />

Finds from the interior <strong>of</strong> Cell 1 consisted <strong>of</strong> an unfinished stone spindle-whorl and three<br />

struck fragments <strong>of</strong> flint. A blue glass bead, a fragment <strong>of</strong> blue glass and a small flint blade<br />

were found in the ash in the entrance passage. A number <strong>of</strong> water-worn pebbles (possible<br />

rubbing stones?) were found in the ash and overlying silt. <strong>The</strong>se deposits had been<br />

subsequently buried by stone collapse and peat.<br />

Cell 2 (1.5m by 1.4m) adjoined Cell 1 at its northwest end. Its walls survived to a maximum<br />

height <strong>of</strong> 0.80m, and would appear to have been built at the same time as the north wall <strong>of</strong><br />

Cell 1. <strong>The</strong> 0.8m wide entrance to this cell was located in the northeast corner and was<br />

defined by an in situ jamb stone at its western side. <strong>The</strong> cell had a roughly paved internal<br />

surface, and a stone spindle-whorl and a number <strong>of</strong> water-worn stones were recovered from<br />

a 120mm thick deposit overlying the paving. As with Cell 1, the occupation layer was buried<br />

under collapsed stone and a deposit <strong>of</strong> peat.<br />

<strong>The</strong> fragmentary remains <strong>of</strong> a third sub-rectangular or oval-shaped structure (Cell 3) were<br />

uncovered to the west <strong>of</strong> the southwest corner <strong>of</strong> Cell 1. This cell is likely to have measured<br />

3.4m x 2.7m internally, and the entrance was probably in the south wall where a large pillarlike<br />

stone was uncovered.<br />

<strong>The</strong> large amount <strong>of</strong> stone collapse within the interior and exterior <strong>of</strong> the buildings suggests<br />

that the cells originally contained corbelled ro<strong>of</strong>s. <strong>The</strong> dark blue glass bead and the available<br />

radiocarbon date indicate an early medieval date for the building.<br />

356

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