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

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

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Westmeath<br />

leather, lignite, bone and antler. <strong>The</strong>re were also some wooden buckets and lathe-turned<br />

bowls.<br />

Hencken believed that, after a brief period <strong>of</strong> occupation, House I sank into the lakebed<br />

sediments and it was covered by more layers <strong>of</strong> peat and brushwood. He believed that two<br />

further houses (Houses II and III, probably one house in reality) were then constructed at<br />

one corner <strong>of</strong> the site, but the central hearth continued in use. Finds from these layers<br />

included a Viking silver kite-shaped brooch, bronze pins, iron chain links, a millstone, bone<br />

comb fragments, a wooden dug-out boat and wooden tubs and hoops. <strong>The</strong> only find from the<br />

floor <strong>of</strong> House II was an iron knife. House III produced a bronze pin, a bone needle and a<br />

wooden dugout boat. Finds from the central hearth included a bronze pennanular brooch and<br />

pin, bone, iron, glass, wood and antler objects. <strong>The</strong> wooden quay structure outside the<br />

crannog produced an iron woodworking axe and a wooden tub.<br />

<strong>The</strong> excavator believed that House II and House III then fell out <strong>of</strong> use and were covered<br />

with a layer <strong>of</strong> clay, some planks on this surface may indicate the construction <strong>of</strong> a fourth<br />

house (House IV). <strong>The</strong>re were two hearths and ash spreads at this level. Finds from these<br />

strata included various objects, such as bronze pins, buckles, querns, and a large iron sideaxe<br />

or hewing axe (probably <strong>of</strong> a medieval date), hones and bone combs and pins, and<br />

objects <strong>of</strong> wood and leather. <strong>The</strong> site was covered by a layer <strong>of</strong> gravel and another deep<br />

layer <strong>of</strong> soil. A hearth was found in this top layer, with finds <strong>of</strong> coins indicating seventeenthcentury<br />

occupation. Ballinderry crannog No. 1 produced an interesting range <strong>of</strong> seventeenthcentury<br />

objects, such as pottery, several coins dating to about 1690, a brass-button, glass<br />

linen smoothers, lead bullets, some <strong>of</strong> which were probably being made there, and several<br />

fragments <strong>of</strong> clay pipes. <strong>The</strong>re was also a range <strong>of</strong> metal and organic finds from un-stratified<br />

deposits outside the palisade, the most important <strong>of</strong> which were a tenth-century copper-alloy<br />

hanging lamp and an array <strong>of</strong> wooden objects.<br />

Lynn’s re-interpretation<br />

Chris Lynn’s stratigraphical and structural re-interpretations <strong>of</strong> the early phases <strong>of</strong> the site<br />

indicated that it comprised two crannogs. In his opinion, Hencken’s ‘House 1’ was itself the<br />

primary crannog (Lynn’s ‘Crannog 1’), defined by the horseshoe-plan area <strong>of</strong> timbers<br />

strengthened by small piles with a smaller, roughly circular wicker house (Hencken’s ‘hearth<br />

surround’, measuring 5m in diameter). <strong>The</strong> horseshoe timbers were actually the open-air<br />

decking around the circular house. Lynn believed that the outer pile palisade derived from a<br />

later period <strong>of</strong> occupation and was not contemporary with this early crannog. This later<br />

period <strong>of</strong> occupation involved the construction <strong>of</strong> a second, larger crannog (Lynn’s ‘Crannog<br />

2’) directly over ‘Crannog 1. ‘Crannog 2’ had a larger palisade, two rectangular houses built<br />

near the edge <strong>of</strong> the site while a large open-air ash spread accumulated across the centre<br />

(although Newman interpreted this as a house floor). This enlargement could have come<br />

shortly after the construction <strong>of</strong> his ‘Crannog 1’.<br />

Newman’s and Johnson’s re-interpretations<br />

Newman came to a similar conclusion through his re-analysis <strong>of</strong> the site and the typological<br />

characteristics <strong>of</strong> its finds. He also proposed House 1 was itself a crannog and that the<br />

circular hearth was a roundhouse. In his opinion, the crannog had a pile palisade, which was<br />

later reinforced by plank palisade, at the same time as which one entrance was blocked up.<br />

Ruth Johnson has also recently carried out a detailed re-evaluation <strong>of</strong> the early layers <strong>of</strong> the<br />

site and has re-examined the finds, particularly in terms <strong>of</strong> their stratigraphical context.<br />

Ballinderry No. 1 will now be summarised in terms <strong>of</strong> its likely sequence <strong>of</strong> development.<br />

Phase 1 – Pre-crannog occupation (late tenth century AD)<br />

Phase 1 saw the building <strong>of</strong> a rectangular log platform (6m by 6m), defined at its edges by a<br />

circular palisade (7m in diameter) <strong>of</strong> posts. This earliest occupation was built on the lake<br />

gyttas at a time when lake levels were low, possibly during a dry period. <strong>The</strong> rectangular<br />

platform was constructed <strong>of</strong> planks and beams laid in a rectilinear and radial fashion, with<br />

layers <strong>of</strong> peat and brushwood (up to seven layers), consisting <strong>of</strong> a likely habitation deposit <strong>of</strong><br />

accumulated bones and peats. It had a raised edge, <strong>of</strong> horizontal beams. <strong>The</strong>re was a<br />

705

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