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Sligo<br />

Inishmurray, Co. Sligo<br />

Early Medieval Ecclesiastical Settlements.<br />

Grid Reference: G57355415 (157356/354152)<br />

SMR No: SL001-007006<br />

Excavation Licence: 97E0256; 99E0381; 00E0484<br />

Excavation Duration/Year: 1997-2000.<br />

Site Director: J. O’Sullivan & T. Ó Carragáin (University College Cork)<br />

<strong>The</strong> island <strong>of</strong> Inishmurray, located in Ballysadare Bay between counties Sligo and Donegal,<br />

was subject to a series <strong>of</strong> archaeological surveys and excavations between 1997 and 2000.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se focused primarily on the number <strong>of</strong> monastic/ecclesiastical sites on the island, and<br />

their utilisation as a focus for medieval pilgrimages. Excavations at the leachta (dry-stone<br />

built altars) at Relickoran (99E0381) and Ollamurray (00E0484), for example, uncovered<br />

human burials, a number <strong>of</strong> which were radiocarbon dated (see below). <strong>The</strong>se dates suggest<br />

that the leachta were constructed later than the earliest phase <strong>of</strong> Christian burials on the<br />

island, and that this early phase coincides well with the first appearance <strong>of</strong> the site <strong>of</strong><br />

Inishmurray in AU 751.<br />

<strong>The</strong> excavation at the leacht at Trahanareear (97E0256) uncovered an earlier dry-stone built<br />

monastic cell partially preserved beneath the later altar (Fig. 276). From the remains it was<br />

possible to estimate an internal diameter <strong>of</strong> 1.8m, and, the relative narrowness <strong>of</strong> the walls<br />

led the excavators to suggest that this building may have been ro<strong>of</strong>ed with turf or thatch,<br />

rather than being a corbelled ‘beehive’ hut. This interpretation appears to be supported by<br />

the discovery <strong>of</strong> a central posthole in a paved-area <strong>of</strong> this cell which had survived beneath<br />

the leacht. <strong>The</strong> most intriguing find from this structure was two sherds <strong>of</strong> a green glass vial<br />

found in the wall cavity. <strong>The</strong>se have been identified as either belonging to a seventeenth or<br />

eighteenth apothecary’s perfume flask; or alternatively as representing the remains <strong>of</strong> an<br />

Imperial Roman ‘lacrymar’ – which would have been used to catch the tears <strong>of</strong> mourners at a<br />

funeral. It has also been argued to be <strong>of</strong> Byzantine or even Frankish manufacture.<br />

Subsequent testing was unable to definitively verify the age <strong>of</strong> this glass vessel, and thus it<br />

remains an enigma.<br />

Fig. 276: Early phase <strong>of</strong> leacht at Trahanareear, Inishmuray, Co. Sligo showing cell (after<br />

O’Sullivan & Ó Carragáin 2008, 224).<br />

620

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