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EMAP_Progress_Reports_2009_2.pdf - The Heritage Council

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Cork<br />

‘St. Gobnet’s House’ (Glebe td.), Co. Cork<br />

Early Medieval Ecclesiastical Settlement<br />

Grid Ref: W19757684 (119751/076844)<br />

SMR No: CO058-034001<br />

Excavation Licence: N/A<br />

Excavation Duration/Year: June - August 1951<br />

Site Director: M.J. O’Kelly (University College Cork)<br />

St. Gobnet’s House, a circular stone structure to the west of a medieval church site situated<br />

on a level area on a hillside, was excavated over the course of eight weeks between June and<br />

August 1951. <strong>The</strong> excavation was financed by means of a Special Employment Scheme and<br />

administered through the Commissioners of Public Works and the Royal Irish Academy.<br />

<strong>The</strong> excavation revealed two phases of occupation with little or no interval between them<br />

(Fig. 57). <strong>The</strong> earlier phase is associated with a wooden rectangular house (or houses)<br />

defined by several large postholes. A number of pits containing lumps of slag and furnace<br />

bottoms were found inside the floor plan of this structure; a hollow, filled with habitation<br />

refuse and clusters of large stone, also belonged to this phase. An elaborate system of stonelined<br />

drains and trenches were also constructed to trap and draw off surface water coming<br />

down from a hill rising to the north and north-west of the site.<br />

<strong>The</strong> wooden structure was subsequently removed and replaced by the round stone building<br />

after the level of the ground was first raised by the laying down of a charcoal-rich soil deposit<br />

(0.15m thick). One pit found inside the south wall of the stone round house belonged to the<br />

early phase of occupation. This appeared to have been in use during the laying down of the<br />

levelling-deposit, suggesting that there was little or no interval between the abandonment of<br />

the primary structure and the construction of the secondary stone building.<br />

<strong>The</strong> round stone building had a floor diameter of 6.1m. Its walls averaged 1.5m thick at the<br />

base and contained an inner and outer face with a rubble core. A central post in the centre of<br />

the structure supported the roof while two smaller posts set at the inner edges of the<br />

entrance jamb slabs evidently formed part of a frame for a wooden door. A well was<br />

excavated 1.8m outside the roundhouse door and consisted of a circular hole, 0.45m in<br />

diameter and dug to a depth of 0.75m in the soil.<br />

<strong>The</strong> second phase was particularly associated with iron and metalworking. A hearth and<br />

several pits rich in charcoal, lumps of slag and potential furnace bottoms were excavated in<br />

the interior of the round house and were used also probably in connection with iron smelting.<br />

Numerous postholes of various sizes were excavated between and around the pits and may<br />

have held short stakes to support some form of structures associated with the iron smelting<br />

process. Two crucible fragments containing traces of bronze indicate that a small amount of<br />

bronze-working was also undertaken on site.<br />

A blue glass bead and possibly an iron spearhead, and an iron brad belong to the primary<br />

period of occupation. <strong>The</strong> finds from the round house stratum consisted of two crucibles, two<br />

short lengths of bronze wire, three fragments of a jet bracelet, five iron knives, two ferrules,<br />

several corroded iron nails, a brad, a spindle whorl, four shale discs, seventeen whetstones,<br />

two spherical stones and flint and chert cores. <strong>The</strong> site also produced a large quantity of iron<br />

slag, 57 furnace bottoms and fragments of 80 others, clay furnace covers and a small<br />

fragment of a possible tuyère, although these may belong to the primary phase. Animal bone<br />

was poorly preserved due to the acidic nature of the soil but the meagre evidence appeared<br />

to belong to sheep and cattle.<br />

103

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