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

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Louth<br />

Millockstown, Co. Louth<br />

Early Medieval Settlement-cemetery<br />

Grid reference: N977875 (29770/28750)<br />

SMR: LH017-054<br />

Excavation Licence No: N/A<br />

Excavation duration: October – December 1980<br />

Site director: C. Manning (OPW)<br />

An excavation was conducted at Millockstown after work on the land, by the owner, revealed<br />

part <strong>of</strong> a souterrain. <strong>The</strong> excavation also revealed another souterrain and multi-phase<br />

settlement enclosure activity consisting <strong>of</strong> a D-shaped enclosure, which was replaced by a<br />

smaller circular enclosure, and a final and larger, D-shaped enclosure, which replaced the first<br />

two enclosures. <strong>The</strong> latter was associated with the souterrains and a cemetery. <strong>The</strong> site was<br />

situated on a natural terrace, at 121m OD, near the top <strong>of</strong> a southward-facing slope. <strong>The</strong> site<br />

was not fully excavated and the archaeological features were identified in a number <strong>of</strong><br />

trenches across the site (Fig. 228).<br />

<strong>The</strong> Phase I D-shaped enclosure (65m by 56m) was defined by a ditch which averaged 1.4m<br />

in width and had a maximum depth <strong>of</strong> 1.5m. No evidence for a bank survived. It enclosed<br />

three spreads <strong>of</strong> occupation material including a hearth and charcoal. Charcoal from one <strong>of</strong><br />

the occupation spreads was radiocarbon dated to A.D. 322-609. <strong>The</strong> only find from this<br />

phase, from another habitation spread, was the terminal and part <strong>of</strong> the ring <strong>of</strong> a zoomorphic<br />

penannular brooch which dates to the third century. <strong>The</strong>refore, based on the brooch and<br />

radiocarbon date, it appears that the Phase I enclosure was constructed in the third or fourth<br />

century A.D.<br />

During Phase II, a smaller circular enclosure replaced, and was constructed centrally within,<br />

the earlier D-shaped enclosure. It measured 37m in diameter and enclosed a hearth and a<br />

spread <strong>of</strong> carbonised grain. <strong>The</strong> ditch averaged 2.7m in width and was 1.5m deep and the<br />

remains <strong>of</strong> the bank were evident. <strong>The</strong> only finds from the ditch were animal bone and a<br />

large iron nail. No radiocarbon dates were available for this phase so all that can be surmised<br />

is that the enclosure was constructed in between Phase I and Phase III.<br />

Phase III witnessed the construction <strong>of</strong> a final, and much bigger, D-shaped enclosure which<br />

replaced the first two enclosures. It measured 40m by 100m and was associated with two<br />

souterrains, a cemetery and two pits. <strong>The</strong> ditch measured between 2.8m and 4m in width<br />

and had a maximum depth <strong>of</strong> 2m. <strong>The</strong> only finds from the ditch were animal bones. Charcoal<br />

from the ditch returned a very broad radiocarbon date <strong>of</strong> A.D. 576-1024.<br />

<strong>The</strong> cemetery has been ascribed to the third phase because it cut through the Phase I and<br />

Phase II occupation layers. It measured 20m by 12m and was roughly centrally-placed within<br />

Enclosure III. It was only partially excavated. <strong>The</strong> majority <strong>of</strong> graves were stone or slab-lined<br />

and many cut into earlier ones. <strong>The</strong> burials were extended inhumations and aligned with their<br />

heads to the west. One <strong>of</strong> the graves utilised a quern fragment in its construction while<br />

objects found in association with the graves, but not deliberate grave-goods, included an iron<br />

nail and needle.<br />

A word <strong>of</strong> caution must be assigned to the dating <strong>of</strong> the burial ground. Many similar sites<br />

have shown that the cemetery represented the first phase <strong>of</strong> activity and that settlement and<br />

agriculture then developed. It may be that the unexcavated part <strong>of</strong> the cemetery contains the<br />

earliest graves which could be contemporary with the construction <strong>of</strong> the first enclosure. A<br />

spread within the Phase I enclosure was dated but the ditch was not. <strong>The</strong> exact chronology<br />

<strong>of</strong> the site remains difficult to determine without radiocarbon dates from the enclosure<br />

ditches and burials.<br />

481

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