Early medieval Ireland was an overwhelmingly rural landscape, with individual farmsteads (raths and crannogs), fields, and route-ways set in a highly managed agricultural landscape. In this rural landscape farming was the constant in people’s daily lives. The majority of the community, especially the ordinary and un-free members of society, such as the low-status commoners, hereditary serfs and slaves, would have spent most of their lives at work in the fields - herding cattle, sheep and pigs, ploughing, sowing and harvesting crops, or building and repairing field-walls. In the home, the daily lives of men and women would have been dominated by domestic activities relating to agriculture, whether this was in terms of preparing milk and chee...
When compared with earlier periods, the Neolithic in Ireland (4000–2500 cal BC) witnessed enormous c...
This article offers a critical re-examination of Early Modern migrations to Ireland and their effect...
This thesis investigates the technology of iron production in Iron Age and early medieval Ireland an...
About 10% of the total National Roads Authority-funded excavations in the Republic of Ireland produc...
This paper sheds light on the neglected question of how archaeologists might imagineand identify evi...
This thesis creates a new understanding of the phenomenon of transhumance in post-medieval Ireland, ...
The excavation boom in the early twenty-first century has created a substantial archaeological datab...
The character of the late medieval rural landscape of Ireland has been difficult to identify.A surve...
© Society for Medieval Archaeology 2014. Accepted version deposited in accordance with SHERPA RoMEO ...
This paper presents a preliminary survey of some evidence presented by early Irish law for changes i...
EMAP Report 6.1 deals with the archaeological evidence for industrial activity on secular sites in e...
EMAP Report 6.1 deals with the archaeological evidence for industrial activity on secular sites in e...
A multi-disciplinary study assessing the evidence for agriculture in Neolithic Ireland is presented,...
While the cereal agriculture of medieval Europe has been studied exhaustively, the pastoral resource...
The pastoral identity of the South-East is synonymous with the economy of sheep pasture and the medi...
When compared with earlier periods, the Neolithic in Ireland (4000–2500 cal BC) witnessed enormous c...
This article offers a critical re-examination of Early Modern migrations to Ireland and their effect...
This thesis investigates the technology of iron production in Iron Age and early medieval Ireland an...
About 10% of the total National Roads Authority-funded excavations in the Republic of Ireland produc...
This paper sheds light on the neglected question of how archaeologists might imagineand identify evi...
This thesis creates a new understanding of the phenomenon of transhumance in post-medieval Ireland, ...
The excavation boom in the early twenty-first century has created a substantial archaeological datab...
The character of the late medieval rural landscape of Ireland has been difficult to identify.A surve...
© Society for Medieval Archaeology 2014. Accepted version deposited in accordance with SHERPA RoMEO ...
This paper presents a preliminary survey of some evidence presented by early Irish law for changes i...
EMAP Report 6.1 deals with the archaeological evidence for industrial activity on secular sites in e...
EMAP Report 6.1 deals with the archaeological evidence for industrial activity on secular sites in e...
A multi-disciplinary study assessing the evidence for agriculture in Neolithic Ireland is presented,...
While the cereal agriculture of medieval Europe has been studied exhaustively, the pastoral resource...
The pastoral identity of the South-East is synonymous with the economy of sheep pasture and the medi...
When compared with earlier periods, the Neolithic in Ireland (4000–2500 cal BC) witnessed enormous c...
This article offers a critical re-examination of Early Modern migrations to Ireland and their effect...
This thesis investigates the technology of iron production in Iron Age and early medieval Ireland an...