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EMAP_Progress_Reports_2009_2.pdf - The Heritage Council

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Clare<br />

Medieval Activity<br />

Significant evidence for medieval burial, industrial activity, surfaces and pathways were<br />

uncovered across the site. Twenty thirteenth century burials were excavated in the interior of<br />

St. Bridget’s church with further medieval burial revealed in the vicinity of the round tower<br />

and St. Caimin’s church. St. Brigid’s enclosure and surrounding area was also used for<br />

industrial activities- stoneworking, metalworking, ironworking and boneworking- in the<br />

medieval period.<br />

Quern-stones appear to have been manufactured to the north of the St. Brigid’s enclosure as<br />

two possibly thirteenth century decorated querns and fragments of other quern-stones were<br />

recovered from a series of pits in the area. Boneworking evidence was also confined mainly<br />

to the north of St. Brigid’s church and comprised fragments of red deer antler, complete and<br />

incomplete bone and antler combs and needles, points and shroud pin. Associated finds of<br />

bronze stick-pins, coins and other objects suggest that this activity was mainly thirteenth<br />

century.<br />

<strong>The</strong> ironworking evidence was uncovered mainly within St. Brigid’s enclosure to the<br />

immediate north of the church and included fragments of furnace-bottoms as well as<br />

quantities of clinker and bloom from a number of pits. A clay dome in an irregular flatbottomed<br />

straight-sided pit to the immediate west of the church was interpreted as a bronzeworking<br />

furnace. Finds from the furnace included slag, charcoal, scraps of burnt bone and<br />

tiny fragments of green copper oxide.<br />

Post-medieval Pilgrimage and burial<br />

<strong>The</strong> ecclesiastical complex was remodeled in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries with<br />

the construction of a number of drystone pilgrim ‘station’ enclosures surrounding the<br />

‘Confessional’ Cell and the churches of St. Michael and St. Brigid. Areas of paving<br />

circumnavigated the inner face of the enclosures and allowed the pilgrims perform a ‘round’<br />

or circuit of these monuments.<br />

A small post-medieval mortared stone structure and an infant cemetery (Cillín) were<br />

excavated within the ‘station’ enclosure at St. Michael’s. Similarly, the ‘Confessional’ Cell in its<br />

present form was dated to c. A.D. 1700 from the recovery of part of a late seventeenth<br />

century clay pipe from a context under its foundations. A broad paved roadway connecting<br />

the church sites of St. Caimin’s and St. Mary’s was also built in this period.<br />

General Finds<br />

Finds from the sites included iron nails, knives, hooks, bolts, staples arrowheads, medieval<br />

chainmail, 13 th century metal scabbard tip, bronze buckles, pins, needles, mounts, rings,<br />

bone combs, pins, needles, gaming pieces, motif-pieces, stone moulds, trial-pieces,<br />

Romanesque voussoirs and fragments, whetstones, quern-stones, jet bracelet fragments, a<br />

Hiberno-Norse coin quarter, a 12 th century early Norman coin hoard a sherds of Bii ware and<br />

a few sherds of E-ware.<br />

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