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

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Offaly<br />

In the Phase 2 occupation (according to Newman’s re-interpretation), probably dating to the<br />

late sixth century AD, the site had an early medieval occupation surface apparently used as<br />

an open-air site used for cooking, bathing and the processing <strong>of</strong> antler and deer bone,<br />

potentially associated with aristocratic red deer hunting. <strong>The</strong> occupation surface was on the<br />

lake marls, overlying the late Bronze Age site. <strong>The</strong>re were also 11 circular wicker structures,<br />

clustered in groups, consisting <strong>of</strong> circular baskets, 1-2.2m in diameter, 0.95m in height, set<br />

into the ground. <strong>The</strong>re was also an ‘outer hearth’ on a small rise, with logs at the base, with<br />

stone, gravel, sand and ashes filling the pit. This pre-occupation surface produced a large<br />

amount <strong>of</strong> red deer bone (up to 30% <strong>of</strong> the site assemblage), consisting <strong>of</strong> at least 27<br />

individuals, with eruption <strong>of</strong> antlers on skull indicating that they had been killed in the winter.<br />

Chronologically diagnostic finds from Phase 2 included a copper-alloy pin (sixth/seventh<br />

century date), sherds <strong>of</strong> E ware (sixth-mid seventh century), a zoomorphic pennanular brooch<br />

(sixth century date, found under timber floor <strong>of</strong> later crannog). <strong>The</strong> outer hearth produced<br />

gaming pieces, bone dice, glass beads and a bronze drinking horn terminal. Finds from<br />

beneath the later crannog’s house floor included the bronze pennanular brooch, a bronze<br />

armlet with twisted inlay, bone objects, whetstones, rubbing stones and a Type 3 pennanular<br />

brooch.<br />

Phase 3 – early medieval crannog (ninth century AD)<br />

In the Phase 3 occupation (dating to the ninth century), there was an early medieval crannog<br />

‘proper’, with extensive evidence for domestic and industrial activity. <strong>The</strong> early medieval<br />

crannog had a palisade with an entrance, a laid surface <strong>of</strong> stone and brushwood and some<br />

evidence for internal houses, although these were badly disturbed by nineteenth century<br />

treasure hunting and antiquarian diggings.<br />

<strong>The</strong> early medieval crannog (22m by 15m) was built <strong>of</strong> a stone and brushwood layer laid onto<br />

a small natural knoll at the centre <strong>of</strong> the crannog, with layers <strong>of</strong> peat, brushwood and general<br />

fill and debris making up the body <strong>of</strong> the mound. This stone and brushwood layer was<br />

defined at its edges by small stakes driven into the s<strong>of</strong>t lake marls. <strong>The</strong> internal area was<br />

densely piled with smaller posts to consolidate the marshy ground. <strong>The</strong> crannog had a wellpreserved<br />

timber floor on the southern side where there was a large hearth with several<br />

layers <strong>of</strong> ashes. <strong>The</strong> crannog was enclosed by an ‘inner palisade’ <strong>of</strong> a dense concentration <strong>of</strong><br />

stakes and posts encircling the site, the tops <strong>of</strong> which lay below the level <strong>of</strong> the crannog’s<br />

internal timber floor, implying that it was a revetment rather than a high enclosing fence.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re was also an ‘outer palisade’ <strong>of</strong> oak posts with a possible berm outside it. <strong>The</strong> palisade<br />

was only partly surviving in the northern side, but it probably had an entrance or gate to the<br />

northeast, defined by two posts driven to 1.5m depth. Although generally considered a later<br />

feature, a brushwood track-way to the southeast may have been part <strong>of</strong> the early medieval<br />

crannog. <strong>The</strong> crannog’s internal area had a timber floor <strong>of</strong> horizontal oak and ash posts in the<br />

southeast quadrant. This was probably the floor <strong>of</strong> a house, but its plan has been lost due to<br />

nineteenth century disturbance. <strong>The</strong> timbers had been freshly cut and were not re-used, and<br />

were laid in four layers <strong>of</strong> logs, criss-crossing each other. Packed between the timbers were<br />

deposits <strong>of</strong> cut peat and brushwood. <strong>The</strong>re were also numerous bones in this area,<br />

particularly between the inner and outer palisades, suggesting that this was the location <strong>of</strong><br />

the site’s midden.<br />

<strong>The</strong> site’s animal bones were primarily found immediately outside the crannog palisade,<br />

where there was an enormous accumulation <strong>of</strong> food bones, chips and fragments <strong>of</strong> wood,<br />

particularly abundant on the east and south sides <strong>of</strong> the site. <strong>The</strong>re were also huge quantities<br />

<strong>of</strong> bone inside the palisade, while a refuse pit was filled with bones and gravel (where there<br />

were also flint blades, arrowhead, and scrapers). Elsewhere the natural lake muds were<br />

covered with a dark clay and thin layer <strong>of</strong> brushwood, in which animal bone was common.<br />

<strong>The</strong> animal bone was primarily <strong>of</strong> cattle (90%), with smaller amounts <strong>of</strong> pig, horse (some<br />

broken) and small amounts <strong>of</strong> hare, rabbit, badger, otter, dog and cat. <strong>The</strong>re were also bones<br />

<strong>of</strong> jay, heron, duck, pintail duck, tufted duck, goose and fowl.<br />

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