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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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Louth<br />

Balgatheran 1, Co. Louth<br />

Early Medieval Enclosure Complex<br />

Grid reference: O04977886 (304970/278860)<br />

SMR: N/A<br />

Excavation Licence No: 00E0477<br />

Excavation duration: July – November 2000<br />

Site director: R. Chapple (Valerie J. Keeley Ltd.)<br />

Balgatheran 1, excavated in advance <strong>of</strong> the Northern Motorway, north <strong>of</strong> Drogheda, was a<br />

potential early medieval enclosure complex that incorporated an enclosure with large internal<br />

ditch and an associated field enclosure. A number <strong>of</strong> structures and a kiln were also<br />

identified. Earlier activity was revealed, including prehistoric pits and postholes, and the late<br />

medieval period was represented by a number <strong>of</strong> possible structures. <strong>The</strong> site was situated<br />

on the southern face <strong>of</strong> a low hill in open pastureland, at 98m OD, and the surrounding<br />

countryside was visible in all directions. <strong>The</strong> relationship and chronology <strong>of</strong> the archaeological<br />

features will not be fully resolved until radiocarbon dates and the final report are available.<br />

A portion <strong>of</strong> a curvilinear enclosure ditch was revealed for 40m in the excavated area and<br />

averaged 3m in width and 2m in depth. <strong>The</strong> ditch was re-cut on at least three occasions and<br />

the enclosure had a projected diameter <strong>of</strong> 70m. Only a partial area <strong>of</strong> the enclosure was<br />

excavated but settlement evidence was lacking in terms <strong>of</strong> artefacts from the ditch and<br />

dwellings within the enclosure. Either evidence for habitation is located outside the road-take<br />

or this enclosure, more probably, was constructed for industrial or agricultural purposes. <strong>The</strong><br />

latter is supported by the presence <strong>of</strong> an industrial building and hut site (see below).<br />

A large L-shaped ditch, which was 3m wide and 1.5m deep, was identified 21m south <strong>of</strong> the<br />

settlement enclosure ditch and ran for 39m across the excavated area. Iron slag, flint<br />

fragments and burnt bone were identified in the primary fill and a secondary phase <strong>of</strong><br />

activity, concentrated at the western terminal, contained large quantities <strong>of</strong> iron slag as well<br />

as residual flints and a single piece <strong>of</strong> a shattered rotary quern-stone. A small stone-lined<br />

hearth was discovered in the ditch, at the eastern end, and it contained charcoal, burnt clay<br />

and a blue glass bead fragment. A posthole associated with the hearth also produced burnt<br />

bone and a quartz crystal. <strong>The</strong> chronological relationship between the two ditches is unclear<br />

but the L-shaped ditch may have demarcated an internal division within the enclosure<br />

possibly to separate industrial and agricultural activities.<br />

A rectangular structure, possibly related to industrial activity, was located centrally within the<br />

site and measured 7m by 2m. It was defined by a series <strong>of</strong> nine postholes, laid out in a<br />

rectangular plan, and one <strong>of</strong> the postholes produced a small quantity <strong>of</strong> iron slag and a<br />

number <strong>of</strong> worked iron fragments. A series <strong>of</strong> fifteen stake-holes, to the south-west <strong>of</strong> the<br />

structure, may have formed a potential post-and-wattle wall, possibly over a number <strong>of</strong><br />

phases, while a gravelled surface was identified on the south-eastern side <strong>of</strong> the building.<br />

Two drip gullies were aligned alongside the building and a number <strong>of</strong> pits were also<br />

associated with the structure.<br />

A possible hut structure was situated to the north <strong>of</strong> the L-shaped ditch. It consisted <strong>of</strong> two<br />

separate, short, arcing gullies that potentially formed a 4m-diameter structure. Two postholes<br />

were cut into the base <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the gullies and this may have been a structure related to<br />

agricultural activity. Its small size, the lack <strong>of</strong> a hearth and domestic items suggests that this<br />

was not a dwelling.<br />

A possible field enclosure, which was stratigraphically later than the final re-cut <strong>of</strong> the L-<br />

shaped ditch, was located 5m east <strong>of</strong> the hut. <strong>The</strong> curvilinear ditch formed a sub-oval<br />

enclosure measuring 21m north-south by 18m east-west. No artefacts were uncovered from<br />

the ditch fill so it may have functioned as an animal enclosure.<br />

457

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