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EMAP_Progress_Reports_2009_2.pdf - The Heritage Council

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Dublin<br />

An amber and jet workshop was identified on Fishamble Street by the presence of unworked amber,<br />

waste chips and unfinished objects (Wallace 1984, 123–4).<br />

Leather and bone working appears to have been concentrated in High Street. Waste from the<br />

workshops indicates that the manufacture and repair of shoes was the major activity. Antler<br />

workshops were also located on High Street as well as Christchurch Place. Antler combs were made<br />

on a large scale and many motif pieces were found in this area (Murray 1983, 54; Wallace 1984, 123–<br />

4).<br />

INDUSTRY<br />

Tenth to twelfth centuries<br />

Evidence for large-scale metalwork production occurred at High Street and Christchurch Place. A<br />

workshop, which manufactured copper-alloy ringed and stick pins, was located on High Street. Clay<br />

crucibles, heating rays and a mould for casting Thor’s hammer symbols were also found in the area.<br />

(Wallace 1984, 123–4).<br />

Small scale and isolated industrial activity also occurred. At Exchange Street Upper/Parliament Street,<br />

there was evidence for possible charcoal production in the form of two charcoal-rich pits (Gowen with<br />

Scully 1996, 15). During the early tenth century, an industrial area replaced the settlement at Temple<br />

Bar West on its eastern side at Exchange Street Upper and Copper Alley (Simpson 1999, 30). <strong>The</strong><br />

area included many unenclosed hearths with neighbouring paved areas, a large hearth which<br />

contained vitrified clay and slag, burnt spreads, charcoal and ash deposits and a large number of<br />

postholes which did form a coherent plan. This industrial area remained active until the early to mid<br />

twelfth century. Similalrly, at Werburgh Street in the tenth century, houses in some plots were<br />

demolished and replaced with furnaces and troughs so that the open spaces could be utilised for<br />

ironworking (Hayden 2002, 49, 51). A final example concerns a crucible that was found in a sheltered<br />

area beside Bank 2 at Ross Road and is suggestive of non-ferrous metalworking in the area during<br />

the middle tenth century (Walsh 2001, 101).<br />

References:<br />

Gowen, M. (with Scally, G.). 1996. Summary Report on Excavations at Exchange Street Upper/<br />

Parliament Street, Dublin. Archaeology in Temple Bar, No.4. Dublin. Temple Bar Properties.<br />

Halpin, A. 2005. Development phases in Hiberno-Norse Dublin: a tale of two cities, in S. Duffy (ed.)<br />

Medieval Dublin VI: Proceedings of the Friends of Medieval Dublin Symposium 2004, 94–113. Dublin.<br />

Four Courts Press.<br />

Hayden, A. 2002. <strong>The</strong> excavation of pre-Norman defences and houses at Werburgh Street, Dublin: a<br />

summary, in S. Duffy (ed.) Medieval Dublin III: Proceedings of the Friends of Medieval Dublin<br />

Symposium 2001, 44–68. Dublin. Four Courts Press.<br />

Lynch, A. & Manning, C. 1990. Dublin Castle – the archaeology project. Archaeology Ireland, 4(2),<br />

65–8.<br />

Lynch, A. & Manning, C. 2001. Excavations at Dublin Castle, 1985–7, in S. Duffy (ed.) Medieval Dublin<br />

II: Proceedings of the Friends of Medieval Dublin Symposium 2000, 160–204. Dublin. Four Courts<br />

Press.<br />

Murray, H. 1983. Viking and Early Medieval Buildings in Dublin. BAR British Series 119. Oxford. BAR.<br />

Ó Ríordáin, A. B. 1984. Excavations in old Dublin, in J. Bradley (ed.) Viking Dublin Exposed, 134–43.<br />

Dublin. O’Brien Press.<br />

Scally, G. 2002. <strong>The</strong> earthen banks and walled defences of Dublin’s north-east corner, in S. Duffy<br />

(ed.) Medieval Dublin III: Proceedings of the Friends of Medieval Dublin Symposium 2001, 11–33.<br />

Dublin. Four Courts Press.<br />

224

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