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

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Meath<br />

‘Madden’s Hill’, Kiltale, Co. Meath<br />

Early Medieval Settlement Enclosure and Cemetery<br />

Grid reference: N896265405 (289266/254050)<br />

SMR No: ME037-025<br />

Excavation License No: N/A<br />

Excavation duration/year: 1966 (2-week excavation)<br />

Site director: E. Rynne (National Museum)<br />

A short excavation was undertaken in Kiltale townland after human bones were discovered<br />

while quarrying for sand. An enclosure, souterrain and earlier cemetery were revealed on top<br />

<strong>of</strong> an esker at approximately 91m OD (Fig. 258).<br />

<strong>The</strong> enclosure was almost circular in plan and measured 40m by 30m. Two sections through<br />

the ditch revealed it was V-shaped and averaged 2.5m wide and 1.7m deep. Large quantities<br />

<strong>of</strong> animal bone were evident in the ditch fill and notably near the bottom. <strong>The</strong> only other find<br />

from this area was a furnace bottom. At least two phases were detected within the ditch<br />

deposits.<br />

A souterrain was built on the enclosure ditch fill and part, or all, <strong>of</strong> it would have extended<br />

under the bank when it had existed. It consisted <strong>of</strong> a short passage and chamber and the<br />

latter was situated within the enclosure ditch. <strong>The</strong> passage was 1.3m in length and narrowed<br />

in width from 0.75m at the entrance to 0.55m at its junction with the chamber. It was 0.7m<br />

high at the former and 0.6m in height at the later. <strong>The</strong> chamber measured 1.7m by 1.5m in<br />

width and was approximately 0.6m high. <strong>The</strong> passage and chamber walls were constructed<br />

with small rounded boulders but no ro<strong>of</strong> lintels were uncovered. This suggests that the<br />

souterrain was never finished, the lintels were taken in antiquity or it was ro<strong>of</strong>ed with lengths<br />

<strong>of</strong> timbers. A small quantity <strong>of</strong> charcoal was found on the passage floor.<br />

A number <strong>of</strong> extended burials, whose orientation varied, were located immediately to the<br />

south-east <strong>of</strong> the enclosure. <strong>The</strong> enclosure also cut through a number <strong>of</strong> burials and<br />

therefore post-dated the initial use <strong>of</strong> the cemetery. Recent farming activities – identified as<br />

traces <strong>of</strong> lazy beds – also resulted in the incomplete survival <strong>of</strong> many burials.<br />

A natural mound 30m south-east <strong>of</strong> the enclosure was also utilised as a burial ground. Again,<br />

the orientation <strong>of</strong> the burials varied and many were disturbed and incomplete. <strong>The</strong> majority<br />

<strong>of</strong> the skeletons were those <strong>of</strong> children. A three-sided rectangular-shaped enclosure,<br />

demarcated by a setting <strong>of</strong> stones, was found near the centre and within the upper part <strong>of</strong><br />

the mound. It was open to the south-west and measured 1.5m by 1.3m. This feature did not<br />

cut or interfere with any <strong>of</strong> the burials and no finds or traces <strong>of</strong> bone were found in<br />

association. <strong>The</strong>refore, its function remains unclear.<br />

Although the area between the mound and enclosure was not excavated due to time<br />

constraints, further burials were identified there during later clearance <strong>of</strong> the subsoil by the<br />

landowner.<br />

A lack <strong>of</strong> radiocarbon dates from the site hampers interpretation. However, the enclosure<br />

ditch cut through some burials which shows the first activity on site was related to burial<br />

activity. Many <strong>of</strong> the burials were disturbed and truncated and their orientation varied. It may<br />

be postulated that the initial focus at the site centred on the natural mound which was used<br />

as a cemetery sometime during the latter part <strong>of</strong> the Iron Age and during the early middleages.<br />

<strong>The</strong> cemetery probably expanded in size and utilised the area outside the mound to the<br />

northwest. <strong>The</strong> enclosure and souterrain cut these later burials and represented the final<br />

early medieval phase at Kiltale. If the children within the mound came from its upper levels,<br />

this may represent a post medieval cillín cemetery and final use <strong>of</strong> the site.<br />

558

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