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EMAP_Progress_Reports_2009_2.pdf - The Heritage Council

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Meath<br />

Athlumney, Co. Meath<br />

Souterrain Complex and Scandinavian Burial<br />

Grid reference: N881336669 (288133/266695)<br />

SMR No: ME025-049<br />

Excavation License No: 97E322; 98E0596<br />

Excavation Duration/Year: September 1997, January - March 1999<br />

Site director: E. O’Sullivan (Margaret Gowen and Co. Ltd.); C. Jones (Freelance)<br />

Four souterrains on the high east bank of the River Boyne, and a Scandinavian burial are<br />

recorded within the townland of Athlumney, Co. Meath in close proximity (Fig. 227).<br />

Two souterrains were identified within a quarry at Athlumney in a field above the flood-plain<br />

of the River Boyne. Subsequent test excavation in 1997 found that no archaeological features<br />

were associated with them within the areas investigated. Further excavation, in advance of<br />

the construction of a business park in 1999, revealed another two souterrains, an overlying<br />

occupation layer and several large ditches in the area.<br />

Souterrain 1 was truncated by the quarry and survived as a short section of passage and a<br />

small portion of a circular chamber.<br />

Souterrain 2 – which was preserved in good condition – had a ramped entrance, two rightangled<br />

left-hand turns in a gradually descending passage, a drop-creep, another short section<br />

of passage and a T-junction with a passage that terminated at each end in a beehive-shaped<br />

chamber. <strong>The</strong> entrance to the souterrain was deliberately blocked with a fill of midden<br />

material and stones.<br />

Only the top stones of Souterrain 3 were exposed and it was not excavated. <strong>The</strong> portion<br />

exposed was a 6.5m length of straight passage.<br />

A potential fourth souterrain was identified but not excavated. <strong>The</strong> exposed section revealed<br />

a dry-stone wall that was three courses high. It is likely this represented the outside<br />

souterrain passage wall. Two hearths and a shallow ditch were associated with an occupation<br />

layer that had not been disturbed by the quarry. Several large ditches were also discovered.<br />

All contained charcoal and/or animal bone. <strong>The</strong>y appeared to represent multi-phase activity at<br />

the site because they did not form an integrated pattern that would suggest a single-phase<br />

enclosure.<br />

Finds were limited and included two bone pins, a glass bead, fragments of lignite bracelets, a<br />

bone bead, a few lithic flakes and some metal items. Carbonised remains of both domestic<br />

(oats, barley, rye and wheat) and wild plants were recovered.<br />

A Scandinavian presence is suggested in Athlumney by a horse skeleton that was found with<br />

a collection of horse furnishings and some human bones (Harrison 2001, 72). Downham<br />

(2003/04) suggests that the burial may be linked to the base at Rossnaree. However, it is<br />

more likely that the burial – accompanied with a mount, a bridle-bit, four bronze-plated iron<br />

rings and seven decorated plaques – belonged to a settlement, possibly a longphort site, at<br />

Athlumney on the eastern bank of the River Boyne (Clinton 2000, 386-8). Clinton (2000, 388)<br />

interprets the burial as being female which would imply a more permanent type of settlement<br />

whereas Harrison (2001, 65, 72) believes that the presence of a large amount of horse bones<br />

indicates the ritual deposition a male with a horse burial. Either way, it is more likely that this<br />

burial occurred in an area – where the rivers Blackwater and Boyne merge – that featured<br />

some form of Scandinavian settlement in the ninth century.<br />

447

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