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

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Westmeath<br />

Newtownlow, Co. Westmeath<br />

Early Medieval Crannog<br />

Grid reference: N38063702 (238062/237020)<br />

SMR No: WM038-011<br />

Excavation Licence No: N/A<br />

Excavation duration/year: 1985; 1986.<br />

Site directors: C. Bourke (Ulster Museum)<br />

<strong>The</strong> early medieval crannog <strong>of</strong> Newtownlow, Co. Westmeath was located in a small, former<br />

lake (250m by 500m) on a tributary <strong>of</strong> the River Brosna. <strong>The</strong> site is located 15-20m from the<br />

original gently sloping shoreline to the south, and 60-70m to the base <strong>of</strong> a steep esker (which<br />

runs east-west) to the north. <strong>The</strong> site was exposed during modern land reclamation in the<br />

early 1980s, when a hoard <strong>of</strong> Anglo-Saxon pennies was recovered from the spoil. <strong>The</strong> site<br />

was subsequently partly excavated by Cormac Bourke in the 1980s, but remains largely<br />

unpublished.<br />

This was an early medieval crannog built <strong>of</strong> a cairn <strong>of</strong> stones, earth and timber in marshy<br />

ground at base <strong>of</strong> steep esker, probably occupied c. A.D. 950 to c. A.D. 1200 (contemporary<br />

with Ballinderry no. 1, Co. Westmeath, which was 16km to the west). It is part <strong>of</strong> an early<br />

medieval settlement complex, along with a large, univallate enclosure at Newtownlow<br />

situated on slightly elevated ground, 150m to the west at the narrow end <strong>of</strong> the lake. <strong>The</strong><br />

crannog is also overlooked by a large, flat-topped earthen motte surmounted by a late<br />

medieval cylindrical tower (‘Low’s Castle’) at Newtownlow, 300m to southeast. This may<br />

originally have been an early medieval raised rath, appropriated by Anglo-Norman settlers in<br />

the late twelfth century. <strong>The</strong>re is also a probable late medieval parish church beside the<br />

motte, surmounted by a probable seventeenth-century church built on the earlier site, with<br />

an adjacent graveyard at Newtownlow. Palaeoecological studies from nearby Cornaher Lough<br />

indicate early medieval agricultural activities and woodland clearance c. A.D. 500. All sites are<br />

located south <strong>of</strong> a substantial esker that must have been an early route-way.<br />

<strong>The</strong> crannog (17m by 17m, standing to a height <strong>of</strong> 1.5m) was built on a wooden substructure<br />

on the underlying peat, <strong>of</strong> a platform <strong>of</strong> substantial trunks, across which were laid light<br />

timbers and brushwood, interlocked by notches. This was covered with substructural layers <strong>of</strong><br />

clay, peat and stones, buttressed by heavy timbers at the edge. <strong>The</strong> occupation surface may<br />

be represented by an organic, midden layer found in different areas <strong>of</strong> the site. A possible<br />

house on the site was represented by a hearth set on a flat stone, and two arcs <strong>of</strong> oak stakes<br />

(possibly remains <strong>of</strong> a wattle wall) from a sub-circular structure 6m by 4m in diameter. <strong>The</strong><br />

occupation layer appears to have been covered by a layer <strong>of</strong> red/orange soil, interpreted as<br />

the burnt remains <strong>of</strong> a house. Otherwise, the occupation layer was sealed under a buff-tan<br />

clay, incorporating charcoal, crucible fragments, pieces <strong>of</strong> slag and a possible furnace, but no<br />

structures were found in this upper layer. <strong>The</strong> site was enclosed within an irregular palisade,<br />

including a cleft oak palisade on the east side (including two rows <strong>of</strong> planks with horizontals<br />

lying between) and an irregular roundwood post and plank palisade (with scatters <strong>of</strong><br />

roundwood outside it) on the west. Some bone objects and comb fragments, datable to the<br />

tenth century AD, were found in association with this palisade, probably dating its<br />

construction c. A.D. 950. Finds from the machine-disturbed layers in the middle and edge <strong>of</strong><br />

the site included a hoard <strong>of</strong> tenth-century Anglo-Saxon pennies (ranging A.D. 924-955,<br />

probably deposited c. A.D. 950), 20 bronze stick pins, a square-sectioned whetstone with<br />

copper-alloy fittings (probably a ceremonial sceptre). Finds from outside the palisade included<br />

two quernstones, a wooden bucket stave, wooden staves from a small waisted vessel,<br />

fragments <strong>of</strong> leather, a double-sided comb, a shafthole iron axe, an iron pan or ladle. A great<br />

quantity <strong>of</strong> animal bone (including cattle, sheep, pig, goat, horse, red-deer, hare and fox)<br />

was also found outside the palisade.<br />

712

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