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

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Meath<br />

layer. <strong>The</strong> floor deposits were thickest (up to 0.12m in thickness) on the south side near the<br />

hearths, and were thinnest on the north side. <strong>The</strong> earliest hearth was substantial, being a<br />

stone-lined rectangular hearth and was followed by fireplaces added to the east. Most <strong>of</strong> the<br />

spreads <strong>of</strong> animal bone were usually found in the vicinity <strong>of</strong> these hearths. Finds from the<br />

large roundhouse included eight tanged iron knives, three iron key handles, a socketed iron<br />

spearhead, a bone spear-point, stone hones, iron nails, spindle whorls. <strong>The</strong> house also<br />

produced such finds as a bronze pseudo-pennanular ring, a spiral headed bronze ring, two<br />

ringed iron pins, ball and spatula headed bone pins, two bronze finger rings, bone comb<br />

plates, glass beads, eight jet bracelet fragments, a bone gaming piece, 114 pieces <strong>of</strong> flint<br />

(many being strike-a-lights) and a bronze drinking horn terminal. <strong>The</strong> second house was<br />

smaller, approximately 5.2m in diameter and it also had a stone-lined hearth, but the<br />

occupation layer was less apparent. <strong>The</strong>re was a bowl-shaped furnace to the west <strong>of</strong> the<br />

house, lined with lake marls. Finds associated with the furnace included three complete<br />

crucibles, 50 crucible sherds, three heating trays, a clay mould fragment, baked clay nozzles<br />

and a bronze ingot. Many <strong>of</strong> the crucibles bore evidence <strong>of</strong> being held by an iron tongs.<br />

Phase Z (probably dating c. A.D. 780 – 810) was the uppermost, surviving occupation<br />

surface, as it had been greatly disturbed by modern bulldozing during attempted land<br />

reclamation in the 1980s. <strong>The</strong>re were the remains <strong>of</strong> an oak palisade, a foundation layer <strong>of</strong><br />

re-deposited peat and a single charcoal spread. <strong>The</strong> palisade was constructed <strong>of</strong> young oak<br />

roundwood trunks. <strong>The</strong>se posts probably had wattles woven around them where they stood<br />

above the ground. <strong>The</strong> crannog would have been 36-40m across. Finds from this layer<br />

included three tanged iron knives, two complete crucibles and sherds <strong>of</strong> others, part <strong>of</strong> a<br />

rotary quern-stone, a bone comb fragment, a glass bead, a chunk <strong>of</strong> amber and four jet<br />

bracelet fragments.<br />

Moynagh Lough is both a well-preserved multi-period archaeological site and a remarkable<br />

example <strong>of</strong> an early medieval lrish crannog. <strong>The</strong> archaeological evidence <strong>of</strong> a large house,<br />

fine metalwork and imported items suggest that Moynagh Lough was a high-status<br />

settlement, particularly by the mid-eighth century AD. Recent historical research suggests<br />

that Moynagh Lough itself may be identified as a place known as Loch Dé Mundech and that<br />

its crannog may well have been an aristocratic or lordly site <strong>of</strong> the Mugdorne. Its long-term<br />

excavation has revealed several important things about early medieval settlement<br />

continuities, on-site domestic and industrial activities and the status and lives <strong>of</strong> its<br />

inhabitants. <strong>The</strong> crannog was apparently occupied continuously c. A.D. 600 - 810, a period <strong>of</strong><br />

some two hundred years. Although there may have been short phases <strong>of</strong> abandonment, it<br />

seems that every generation or so, the entire crannog was reconstructed and ever larger<br />

houses placed upon it.<br />

<strong>The</strong> site seems to have been used both for domestic occupation and for various metalworking<br />

practices. <strong>The</strong> presence <strong>of</strong> furnaces, copper-ingots, crucibles, heating trays and baked clay<br />

nozzles strongly indicates on-site metal production (melting bronze and smelting copper and<br />

tin) and the numerous clay mould fragments indicate that a wide range <strong>of</strong> bronze artefacts<br />

were actually being made at Moynagh Lough. Amber, gold wire and enamel found on the site<br />

indicate the production <strong>of</strong> fine jewelry. <strong>The</strong>re was also some iron working on the site since<br />

slag, a furnace base and hydrated ferric oxide were found within the large house. Other<br />

crafts practiced on-site include the working <strong>of</strong> wood, leather, bone and antler, while there<br />

may also have been glass working, as glass rods, a vitrified glass bracelet and an unfinished<br />

glass bead are known. <strong>The</strong> crannog dwellers obtained several other fine items through longdistance<br />

trade networks, such as the Merovingian glass vessels, jet bracelets, amber and tin.<br />

<strong>The</strong> diet and economy <strong>of</strong> the site has been revealed by studies <strong>of</strong> the large faunal<br />

assemblage. <strong>The</strong>re were large numbers <strong>of</strong> cattle, pig and sheep, with smaller numbers <strong>of</strong><br />

horse, red deer, cat and dog. Dairy cows predominated in the bovine bone record and were<br />

only killed when they had past their prime while male calves were slaughtered at a young<br />

age. Most <strong>of</strong> the cattle were slaughtered <strong>of</strong>f-site and dressed meat taken on to it for feasting<br />

or normal daily food consumption. It is clear that the surrounding rolling hills were well<br />

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