The landscape of late medieval Ireland, like most places in Europe, was characterized by intensified agricultural exploitation, the growth and founding of towns and cities and the construction of large stone edifices, such as castles and monasteries. None of these could have taken place without iron. Axes were needed for clearing woodland, ploughs for turning the soil, saws for wooden buildings and hammers and chisels for the stone ones, all of which could not realistically have been made from any other material. The many battles, waged with ever increasingly sophisticated weaponry, needed a steady supply of iron and steel. During the same period, the European iron industry itself underwent its most fundamental transformation since its ince...
About 10% of the total National Roads Authority-funded excavations in the Republic of Ireland produc...
In this paper we suggest that iron-seepages, a precursor form of bog iron ore, must have been among ...
Our knowledge of the earliest methods of iron production owes a great debt to 19th_century accounts...
This thesis investigates the technology of iron production in Iron Age and early medieval Ireland an...
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...
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...
The introduction of iron into Ireland during the 8th century BCE had profound influences on the orga...
Recent archaeological excavations in Farranastack townland, Co. Kerry, revealed a pit that contained...
Evidence for non-ferrous metalworking in the late Iron Age to early medieval periods comes mainly fr...
The excavation boom in the early twenty-first century has created a substantial archaeological datab...
The excavation boom in the early twenty-first century has created a substantial archaeological datab...
The Weald of Kent, Sussex and Surrey has long been recognised in the literature as a centre of iron ...
This article outlines the results of an EXARC funded 2019 Twinning project exploring the production ...
About 10% of the total National Roads Authority-funded excavations in the Republic of Ireland produc...
In this paper we suggest that iron-seepages, a precursor form of bog iron ore, must have been among ...
Our knowledge of the earliest methods of iron production owes a great debt to 19th_century accounts...
This thesis investigates the technology of iron production in Iron Age and early medieval Ireland an...
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...
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...
The introduction of iron into Ireland during the 8th century BCE had profound influences on the orga...
Recent archaeological excavations in Farranastack townland, Co. Kerry, revealed a pit that contained...
Evidence for non-ferrous metalworking in the late Iron Age to early medieval periods comes mainly fr...
The excavation boom in the early twenty-first century has created a substantial archaeological datab...
The excavation boom in the early twenty-first century has created a substantial archaeological datab...
The Weald of Kent, Sussex and Surrey has long been recognised in the literature as a centre of iron ...
This article outlines the results of an EXARC funded 2019 Twinning project exploring the production ...
About 10% of the total National Roads Authority-funded excavations in the Republic of Ireland produc...
In this paper we suggest that iron-seepages, a precursor form of bog iron ore, must have been among ...
Our knowledge of the earliest methods of iron production owes a great debt to 19th_century accounts...