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

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Waterford<br />

Though the archaeological evidence is lacking, it has been suggested that the tenth-century<br />

Dún may have contained a single main bisecting street from the river front to Cathedral<br />

Square with the main west gateway on the crest <strong>of</strong> a roughly east-west ridge to the north <strong>of</strong><br />

the cathedral.<br />

<strong>The</strong> settlement expanded to the west in the eleventh and twelfth centuries with the formal<br />

layout <strong>of</strong> three east-west streets- High Street, Peter Street and Lady Lane- outside the<br />

postulated original nucleus. <strong>The</strong> east-west crest <strong>of</strong> the ridge broadened out to the west and<br />

contained the three streets with the break in slope occurring north <strong>of</strong> High Street and south<br />

<strong>of</strong> Lady’s Lane.<br />

A 16m length <strong>of</strong> the original mid/late-eleventh-century metalled surface <strong>of</strong> Peter Street was<br />

excavated (Scully & McCutcheon 1997, 55). <strong>The</strong> road was laid directly on the old ground<br />

surface and appears to have been contemporary with the earliest level (mid-eleventh<br />

century) <strong>of</strong> houses. <strong>The</strong> street was considerably damaged by a modern service trench though<br />

may have been approximately 3.6m wide originally. <strong>The</strong> excavated portion <strong>of</strong> the street was<br />

subsequently covered by a build-up <strong>of</strong> organic material and was never substantially<br />

resurfaced.<br />

<strong>The</strong> three main east-west streets were crossed by three or four north south bisecting streets<br />

and lanes which continued downslope to the banks <strong>of</strong> the River Suir where ships were<br />

presumably docked. Type 4 sunken buildings were excavated adjacent to the modern northsouth<br />

Olaf street and could tentatively indicate a laneway <strong>of</strong> late eleventh century date<br />

(Hurley 1997b, 9-10).<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a considerable corpus <strong>of</strong> excavated pathways associated with plot boundaries and<br />

buildings. Over half <strong>of</strong> the Waterford Type 1 houses contained pathways, particularly outside<br />

the back doors. <strong>The</strong>se pathways to the rear <strong>of</strong> the buildings were best preserved and<br />

consisted <strong>of</strong> a variety <strong>of</strong> material including gravel, wattle mats, limestone slabs and timber<br />

(Scully 1997a, 37).<br />

<strong>The</strong> paths at the front <strong>of</strong> the houses were not as long as those to the rear, owing to the<br />

proximity <strong>of</strong> these houses to the streets (Scully 1997a, 37). Modern service trenches had<br />

unfortunately truncated the front <strong>of</strong> most <strong>of</strong> the street-fronting Type 1 buildings though two<br />

buildings at Peter Street revealed short paths connecting the houses to the streets.<br />

PLOTS AND FENCES<br />

<strong>The</strong>re is a general dearth <strong>of</strong> boundary fences at Scandinavian Waterford in contrast to the<br />

abundant evidence from Dublin (Scully & McCutcheon 1997, 106). <strong>The</strong> location and evolution<br />

<strong>of</strong> plot boundaries at Waterford seems to have been more fluid than excavated examples in<br />

Scandinavian Dublin which were rigidly adhered to throughout the centuries (Wallace 1992,<br />

47). <strong>The</strong> plot boundaries at Waterford were divided by post-and-wattle fences.<br />

Fourteen contiguous plot boundaries were excavated at Peter Street (E639, E527, E406 and<br />

E434) along an area almost 90m long, each plot containing the superimposed strata <strong>of</strong> at<br />

least twelve levels <strong>of</strong> houses dating from the mid-eleventh to early fourteenth century (Scully<br />

& McCutcheon 1997, 53-137). <strong>The</strong> plots were not all occupied at any one time and the<br />

property boundaries changed slightly through the centuries.<br />

Where the plot boundaries were excavated, they were usually confined to the vicinity <strong>of</strong> the<br />

backyard houses with rarely any evidence for boundary divisions between street-fronting<br />

houses (Scully & McCutcheon 1997, 54 & 106). <strong>The</strong> Type 2 houses in the backyards <strong>of</strong> the<br />

earlier levels at Peter Street were also found to <strong>of</strong>ten transgress the boundary <strong>of</strong> previous<br />

plots indicating that plot boundaries locations were not always strictly adhered to. One rare<br />

excavated plot fence at Peter Street was uncovered in Level 1 (mid-eleventh century) and<br />

was associated with a log track-way <strong>of</strong> horizontally-laid oaks (Scully & McCutcheon 1997, 54).<br />

680

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