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

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Waterford<br />

reinforced by the addition <strong>of</strong> a stone retaining wall in the early/mid-twelfth century (Hurley<br />

1997b, 10).<br />

<strong>The</strong> original church <strong>of</strong> the Holy Trinity (Christchurch) was built before A.D. 1185. It was<br />

probably built in the mid-eleventh century (Bradley & Halpin 1992) after the Stage 2 defences<br />

had fallen out <strong>of</strong> use. Excavations have established that St. Peter’s church was also built at<br />

this stage while other churches such as St. Mary’s and St. Olaf’s may date to the same<br />

period.<br />

Settlement rapidly expanded to the west (Phase 4) outside the line <strong>of</strong> the early/late-twelfth<br />

century stone wall constructed along the line <strong>of</strong> Arundel Square and Bakehouse Lane. <strong>The</strong>re<br />

is evidence that this was well underway by the mid-twelfth century when a number <strong>of</strong> houses<br />

were found to be built above the backfilled ditch. <strong>The</strong> line <strong>of</strong> another later twelfth century<br />

(possibly pre-Anglo-Norman) defensive bank and ditch was uncovered in excavations further<br />

west (Wren 1998, 2000, 2001 & 2002; Moran 1999). Subsequently, this defensive ditch and<br />

bank fell out <strong>of</strong> use and was replaced in the early-thirteenth century by a new defensive wall<br />

with gate-towers.<br />

Fig. 301: Topopgraphical development <strong>of</strong> Scandinavian Waterford (after Hurley et al. 1997,<br />

7).<br />

DEFENCES<br />

Ninth-century Dún Defences<br />

It has been suggested that the original nucleus <strong>of</strong> the Scandinavian town was in the area <strong>of</strong><br />

Reginald’s Tower (Bradley & Halpin 1992, 108). Hurley’s model (1997, 8-11) has proposed a<br />

westward expansion with the Phase 1 tenth-century Dún (Dundory) comprising a small<br />

triangular space between the confluence <strong>of</strong> the two rivers. A subsequent developmental<br />

phase (2) - indicated by the layout <strong>of</strong> properties in early maps- may have involved the<br />

enclosure by ramparts <strong>of</strong> a further strip, west <strong>of</strong> the primary nucleus towards the end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

tenth century (Fig. 301 & 302).<br />

675

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