Get in touch with the Museum through Facebook or Twitter if you can help them find any of the missing crosses!
UPDATE: More info is now up on the Museum website.
The National Museum of Ireland is looking for help to track down 'sister replicas' of the life-size casts of Irish High Crosses currently on display in Collin's Barracks, Dublin. The plaster-casts were created a century ago and shipped off around the world to showcase Irish culture and heritage. The Museum has launched a Facebook campaign to locate the current whereabouts of the crosses, starting with a copy of the Monasterboice High Cross sent to Sydney in 1904. Get in touch with the Museum through Facebook or Twitter if you can help them find any of the missing crosses! UPDATE: More info is now up on the Museum website. Add Comment Money for archaeological or historical research, or - lets be honest - for pretty much anything, is scarce on the ground these days which is why news of the availability of this small but useful grant available from the Kildare Archaeological Society is very welcome. The details are embedded above or you can download the poster. A friend linked to this video on Facebook. It's by the guys from Prehistoric Music Ireland and it reminded me of some old footage I recorded at WAC 6 a couple of years ago which you can see above. It's a very short taster video showing a little bit of a demonstration of reconstructed early Irish musical Instruments including trumpets and horns. I was very impressed by the talk and by the noises that came out of the instruments. Particularly the giant, 'Celtic', Loughnashade trumpet. I would highly recommend having a look at the full video that inspired this post. Its embedded after the break or you can go straight to YouTube. Not strictly Irish or archaeology but involving a childish love of Lego, this has to be one of the coolest videos I've come across on YouTube in some time. Indulge me. ![]() Its that time of year again and UCD are looking to recruit another cohort of young, impressionable scholars with their heads in the past. Applications are now open for the UCD School of Archaeology Transition Year Programme. Applicants can find more info after the break or on the School's website. Or you can download the appropriate form here.
This is a great way to stick your toe in the archaeological water and see if you like it. Might be an idea for readers of the blog to pass this on to future lovers of the past who might be interested. If anyone knows of similar courses in other institutions please do leave a comment. I am very happy to announce the launch of the definitive SMELT 2010 documentary (although I can't guarantee a Christmas special or director's cut won't appear. Depends how much money I make from this...). SMELT 2010 was an experimental archaeology weekend held in the National Heritage Park, Ferrycarrig, Co. Wexford with the primary aim of smelting Irish bog ore in a reconstructed bloomery furnace. We had some success, producing iron, but no usable bloom. Still, it was very successful for a first smelt. You can read more in previous blog posts, or soon on the project website, which I am in the process of updating. The full-length video is up on Vimeo and embedded above but, due to space restrictions, it is fairly low quality. The video is also available on the Seandálaíocht YouTube channel in super high quality HD, but split in two (length restrictions!). They are embedded after the break (click "Read More" below). You can also download the full video in HD for your own use here (right-click the link and click save as) but be warned that the file is very large (1.2GB) so it will take a long time to download if you have a slow connection. You can download a much smaller (320MB), lower quality, version here if needed. EDIT: New links and embedded videos have been added to rectify a problem with the audio levels in the original video. Please download again if you have an old version! The Tales of Medieval Dublin lecture series continues next Tuesday in the Wood Quay offices of Dublin City Council. I haven't managed to get to any which is why I was delighted to find that the lectures are being published online. The next event is 'The Wife's Tale' and is given by Dr. Gillian Kenny, an expert on medieval women. Click the button below to add it to your Google Calendar. ![]() Phase 1 (After O'Kelly 1952) Ballyvourney or Baile Bhuirne is a small village in Co. Cork that shelters a locally famous pilgrimage named after a supposed sixth-century Abbess: St. Gobnet. Gobnet, who may have been the brother of a more senior contemporary saint, Abban is generally depicted with a bee-hive, a reference to a story in which she defended herself and her followers from a group of raiders through prayer and the judicious application of bee stings! In the early fifties it was decided by the people of Ballyvourney that a statue of St Gobnet should be erected close to the location of a holy well and a circular stone structure known as St Gobnet's House or Kitchen and long supposed to be the foundations of a round tower. During construction of the statue a crucible was found and it was decided that M.J. O'Kelly from University College Cork (excavator of Newgrange) should be invited to carry out an archaeological excavation. ![]() Phase 2 (After O'Kelly 1952) The excavation revealed extensive remains of post-holes, pits and drains with a first phase of un-enclosed activity with a few possible rectangular post-built structures. the second phase saw the raising of the ground level and construction of a large circular stone structure (St Gobnet's House) with a central post-hole. A well was also dug in front of the entrance. The second phase produced a large amount of slag, pits and a hearth indicating extensive ironworking, probably mainly smithing but possibly also smelting. Artefacts discovered on the site indicate an Early Medieval date (c. 400 A.D. - 1100 A.D.) but no radiocarbon dates are available. Elswhere on the site a mound called St Gobnet's Grave may be prehistoric and is associated with a number of Bullaun Stones, artefacts I have suggested elsewhere may be related to ironworking. This potential link with a deeper, pagan past combined with the unusual evidence for ironworking on the site of a community of female ascetics has made me wonder more than once if St Gobnet may be connected with previous traditions of worship of the Celtic smith-god Gobniu? Close by St Gobnet's Grave, is a graveyard with an intact protestant church and a ruined Medieval chapel which has seen some serious (and worrying) alterations since O'Kelly's excavations including the addition of a PVC conservatory on one side and a number of gawdy lights attached directly to the walls of the Nave and chancel. The site continues to this day as a place of pilgrimage with offerings still being left at St Gobnet's Grave and House. A new tradition of rubbing crude cross shapes into stones on the site could be seen as 'vandalism' but i prefer to look at it as a sign of a living site, still important to the community (and not just a handful of archaeologists). It also serves as a reminder that traditions of practice at ancient religious sites need not always reach back into the distant past, despite what we may like to imagine. References
I was at the UCD Images of Research awards last night and was lucky enough to come away with two runner-up prizes. I'm chuffed to even get a mention considering the quality of the entries (you can check out all my entries here). I've used one of my runner-up pics as the new blog header (I will be adding new headers over time as the mood takes me) and the other winner can be found in the gallery above. Its called 'Igniting the gases'. There are a couple of other archaeology-related images in the exhibition, including a few rare photos of glass beads from the Bronze Age hillfort at Rathgall, Co. Wicklow. ![]() The new design for Seandalaiocht is now officially live. I'll be honest the re-design is largely superficial, much like the last one; I thought the blog would work better with a little more space (hence the title of the post) and who doesn't like having a nice picture to look at when they visit? I haven't changed much (from that read: any) of the content but that will follow in due course. Patience my friends! I do have plans for the site that are more than cosmetic but they will take time; a commodity I rarely have at the moment. However, just to give me a kick up the arse I thought I would list all the things I'd like to get done in the next six months. You can then look forward to a post six months from now when I provide my abject apologies for achieving practically none of these goals!
|