Blog

TESTING AT RTE

Donnybrook, Dublin 4

Archaeological Testing

318426/230914

DU022-084 (Vicinity of)

10E22

A programme of archaeological testing was carried out in greenfield areas at the RTÉ Campus, Donnybrook, Dublin 4 between the 27th and 29th of January 2010.

The proposed development consists of the future provision of a new broadcasting facility at the RTÉ Campus. The work entails the construction of a new studio block in the north-western greenfield area of the campus and also includes the site of the existing radio building, a multi-storey car park and areas of surface car parking and associated services.

 

Some people might recognise this location

There are two protected structures on the site, Montrose House and Mount Errol House (but not included in the application site). The proposed development is also on previously undeveloped land beside the zone of archaeological potential DU022-084 Viking Burial – (description below).

In 1887 a circular mound (dia. c. 30m) covering an estimated fifty human remains was discovered near Donnybrook Village on the grounds of he present German Embassy (Stokes 1895, 5 – 25).  The remains lay ‘piled above each other’ except for one extended inhumation which lay north-south and accompanied by an iron sword, its handle inlaid with gold and silver.  The finds included weapons and personal jewellery.  This is thought to be a Viking cemetery.

While not listed in the Topographical Files, it is worth mentioning the Viking sword found by Dr. William Frazer in 1879 during excavations near Mount Errol.  In 1879, Sir William Frazer presented to the Royal Irish Academy an account of discoveries made during the levelling of a mound at Donnybrook (see above).  The mound was found to contain a group of weapons including a sword.

In 1978, R.A. Hall recognised the sword in the collection of the Castle Museum, Nottingham.  In his paper ‘A Viking-age Grave at Donnybrook’ (1978), Hall discusses the sword and its conservation in the Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton; “The sword (Castle Museum Nottingham, Accession number T 608) was acquired by Nottingham Corporation as part of a donation of assorted objects given by W.J. Thompson in the mid-1950s, and has been on display since 1964.  Two labels on a wooden block to which it was attached gave the following information: Lot 35. Found in the old city, Dublin, 1880. Dr. Frazer Collection.  Bought at Glendenings Sale Abt 1936. Viking Sword. Very valuable and rare.

It is not known who wrote this label, but as the writer was uncertain about the precise date of the sword’s purchase, his attribution of it to the Old City, Dublin, rather than Donnybrook, which is three miles away immediately outside the modern city boundary, and his statement that it was discovered in 1880, the year after the investigation at Mount Erroll [sic], need not weigh heavily against the equation of Nottingham Castle Museum T 608 with Frazer’s sword from Donnybrook.  The sword’s unusually elaborate decorative scheme corresponds with that illustrated in Frazer’s report, as do its dimensions, and there is little room for doubt that this is the Donnybrook Sword.  It has not proved possible to trace its history between 1879 and 1936, or to discover details of its sale in 1936, as Glendining’s records were destroyed in the Second World War.

The Nottingham Castle Museum sword has since been acquired on loan by the National Museum of Ireland and is on display in the Viking display at Kildare Street.

Sword, Nottingham Castle Museum T 608, provenance attributed to Mount Erroll [sic], Donnybrook, Co. Dublin. (adapted from Hall, R.A. 1978)

Testing consisted of a series of trenches throughout greenfield areas in the subject site. The cumulative length of the test trenches excavated over the three days was approximately 331.5m. All trenches were excavated by machine to a width of 160mm. Generally the exposed stratigraphy was uniform throughout.  Test excavation throughout the site exposed a series of modern drainage features, modern service cuts, imported soils, building rubble, bedding surfaces for temporary accommodation huts/prefabs, a brick surface and pockets of decaying stone and natural subsoils.

Two further test trenches were originally proposed along the banked material between Montrose and Mount Errol in the original method statement – however, access was not possible due to the density of the trees in this area. A third proposed trench to the west was also impossible to access. The series of trenches within the south eastern part of Mount Errol were also redesigned due to space restrictions.

The entire site has been significantly disturbed in the past with numerous temporary buildings etc., having been constructed, removed and replaced. No finds, features or materials of an archaeological nature were evident.

The field boundary to the SE of Mount Errol will be directly affected by the proposed development.  This boundary is featured on the 1st edition OS map as forming part of the original curtilage to the demesne and is indicated by a broken line to the west and straight line to the west suggesting a pedestrian or bridle path.  Nothing of archaeological significance was noted during testing of this feature.

It was recommended that the brick surface encountered in test trench 10 be uncovered prior to construction works and the area and extent of this surface recorded.

Declan Moore, Moore Archaeological & Environmental Services Ltd. (MOORE GROUP), Corporate House, Ballybrit Business Park, Ballybrit, Galway.

References/Additional reading:

Frazer, W., 1879-88.  ‘Description of a great sepulchral mound…’. Proc. Royal Irish Acad., 2nd series, II, p29-55.

Joyce, P.W., 1913. Irish Names of Places. Vol. III. Dublin.

Hall, R 1978 A Viking Age grave at Donnybrook, Co. Dublin. Medieval Archaeology XXII, 6483.

Nolan, W. & Simms, A., (Eds.), 1998. Irish Towns, A Guide to Sources. Dublin.

O’Brien, E.  1992  A Re-assessment of the `Great Sepulchral Mound’ containing a Viking Burial at  Donnybrook, Dublin.  Medieval Archaeology Vol.XXXVI,1992. pp.170-173. (London).

EXCAVATIONS 2010

From today we’ll be adding the submissions we’ve made to the excavations website to the blog.

From their website:

The database contains summary accounts of all the excavations carried out in Ireland – North and South – from 1970 to 2007. It has been compiled from the published Excavations Bulletins from those years, with a similar format. The Excavations Bulletin was started by Tom Delaney in the early 1970s and was revived by Claire Cotter in 1985. Since 1986 it has been compiled by Isabel Bennett and published by Wordwell, with support from the Office of Public Works, latterly the Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local Government. For the years from 1977 to 1984 the Excavation Bulletin was incorporated in the Irish Journal of Archaeology.

We’ll put up all the work we’ve done since 2007 as the remainder are available at the link above. The summaries we publish here will in some cases be a little more detailed than the ones at excavations.ie. In some cases they are likely to be a little uninteresting, but we feel it’s important to communicate as much of our work as we possibly can.

Each summary will be introduced by location, type of work, NGR, known archaeological site and licence number – see example below.

Donnybrook, Dublin 4

Archaeological Testing

318426/230914

DU022-084 (Vicinity of)

10E22

Over the next couple of day’s there’s Declan’s work… Starting with testing at RTE.

‘THEN DIG’ POST

Photo: White House CC

There’s a somewhat long tirade by way of an introduction to this post on distance, perceptions from afar, and the current state of Ireland so, indulge, or bear with, me while I set the scene!

Writing in the Irish Times just before the visit of the queen of England to the Republic of Ireland in May, wherein, as we are not subjects of her majesty, we are not required to bow or curtsey, or capitalise the word ‘queen’ (I may have made that last bit up – or my Republican Grandmother did), Irish comedian Dara Ó’Briain notes that:

‘There is a joke that all Irish comics have a version of, but the most economic expression is from Andrew Maxwell. He would declare in an English comedy club “The Irish love the Muslims…” and after a long, long pause, “They’ve really taken the heat off us”.’

Ó’Briain’s point is that, in Britain, the Irish have ceased being identified a major ’terror threat’. We have been normalised in British society. The visit of the queen signals a further stabilisation of our relationship with our nearest neighbours and the culmination of a long and difficult peace process on our Island. Unfortunately no member of the public, other than some local celebrities (they’re always smaller than you thought, you know) were allowed within 50km of her majesty, in case we’d do something embarrassing like keep our hands in our pockets or something! Our local media framed the visit as ‘the Nation growing up’, a sign of our ‘maturity’, and carefully sanitised the past……..

You can read the rest of this post at Then Dig by clicking here.

HOT ROCK BREW IN OKLAHOMA

Thanks to Merryn Dineley for pointing this one out to us.. Some Oklahoman (is that what you call people from Oklahoma?) home brewers have embraced Fulacht Fiadh brewing techniques – and added their own modern twists. But the basic technique remains the same.

‘THEN DIG’ THEN…

Then Dig is an archaeological group blog conceived after a popular blog carnival leading up to the Blogging Archaeology session at the 76th meeting of the Society for American Archaeology and is the brainchild of Colleen Morgan and Alun Salt, with the goal of bringing the best of archaeological blogging together in one place. It’s a nicely presented blog and features a growing photo gallery.

Hosted by the Archaeological Research Facility at the University of California, Berkeley, the site went live on June 1st. There’s a monthly theme for posts as well as general interest, peer-reviewed posts and other posts. This month the theme, curated by Alun Salt, is ‘Distance’, and currently features posts by Ulla Rajala, Matt Law, Di Hu, Alun Salt, Marion Diamond and Katy Meyers. Declan has contributed a post due for publication next week (we think) – Update: post now published – click here…. Next month’s theme, curated by Terry Brock, is on the subject of ‘Tools’, see here for the call for posts.