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

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Mayo<br />

Lislackagh, Co. Mayo<br />

Early Medieval Settlement Enclosure.<br />

Grid Ref: M35679758 (13567/29758)<br />

SMR No: MA071-042<br />

Excavation Licence: 92E0152<br />

Excavation Duration/Year: September 1992 – March 1993.<br />

Site Director: G. Walsh (for Mayo County Council).<br />

<strong>The</strong> site consisted <strong>of</strong> a severely truncated enclosure (38.5m by 39.5m in internal diameter)<br />

which had been almost completely levelled in the late-1970s (Fig. 238); excavation was<br />

required in 1992 to facilitate the construction <strong>of</strong> the Swinford by-pass.<br />

Excavation through the ditch recorded a stony basal layer, with subsequent gradual in-fill<br />

layers. Animal bones and iron slag were recovered from these contexts. Excavation in the<br />

interior <strong>of</strong> the site revealed evidence for three roundhouses (Fig. 239). House 1 was the<br />

largest (4.6m in diameter), and contained the burnt remains <strong>of</strong> wattle-and-daub. A number <strong>of</strong><br />

possible internal postholes were also identified, potentially belonging to ro<strong>of</strong> supports. Finds<br />

from this building include quantities <strong>of</strong> animal bone (751 fragments), an (unfinished?) blue<br />

glass bead, part <strong>of</strong> a bronze pin head, fragments <strong>of</strong> bronze, and iron slag. House 1 appears<br />

to have been burnt down, but this does not appear to have been the case with House 2<br />

(3.6m in diameter). Finds from this house include a fragment <strong>of</strong> bronze and three blue glass<br />

beads, as well as quantities <strong>of</strong> animal bone (499 fragments). House 3 (3.9m in diameter) was<br />

the most truncated structure. <strong>The</strong> fill <strong>of</strong> the foundation trench for this building included a<br />

fragment <strong>of</strong> iron slag with limestone inclusions which was interpreted as refuse from a failed<br />

smelt. An iron smelting furnace pit was later identified on site. Iron slag and smelted iron<br />

nodules were recovered from this area.<br />

A number <strong>of</strong> un-stratified, but diagnostic early medieval artefacts, were recovered from the<br />

topsoil. <strong>The</strong>se included two iron ‘hooks’, an iron knife blade, a yellow glass bead, a calcite<br />

bead, and a fragment <strong>of</strong> a lignite bracelet. Analysis <strong>of</strong> the faunal assemblage suggests that<br />

cattle dominated (with almost 50% <strong>of</strong> the identified bones). Surprisingly horse was next in<br />

order (with almost 40%), although this may be due to taphonomic survival. <strong>The</strong>re were<br />

variations between the three houses, for example in House 2 there were only three sheep<br />

bones, and no horse bones, whereas in House 3, there were only horse and pig bones.<br />

Although the site appears to be typologically early medieval – a supposition which is<br />

supported by the material culture – the dates from the three houses on site are Iron Age (see<br />

below). It is possible that the houses substantially pre-dated the enclosure, and any<br />

perceived relationship between them was merely coincidental. Given the early medieval<br />

nature <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the finds from these structures, that is an unlikely option. It thus seems<br />

most probable that these dates were retrieved from charcoal from structural timbers, and as<br />

such, these dates refer, not to the felling date <strong>of</strong> the tree, but rather to a date when the tree<br />

was still growing.<br />

500

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