In this section we look at the heritage of Ireland - its scholars and scribes, the archaeology of the country and traces of people who have inhabited the island over the years.
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Archaeology of Ireland
The Irish
countryside is liberally dotted with traces of the people who have inhabited
the island over the past 9,000 years.
In some instances the "trace" may consist of a lost or discarded flint
or bronze implement, in others a scatter of broken pottery. Either can constitute
the first perceived evidence of the existence of a dwelling-site or grave.
Some sites are instantly recognisable as ancient monuments, as in where
a cluster of stone buildings, including a Round Tower are found grouped
around a High Cross.
This immediately suggests the remains of an Early Christian monastery.
Others, however, are not so easily recognised or interpreted. A collection
of large stones in the corner of a field is not always immediately identified
as the remains of a megalithic tomb of prehistoric times. Some sites have
no surface indications at all, or at best only a few humps or bumps whose
significance is only revealed by ploughing or other disturbance.
It is not necessarily the age of the site or monument which dictates
its state of preservation. The materials from which it was originally made
are much more influential. Structures made of organic materials, such as
wood, decay quite rapidly and often leave little or no trace. Those made
of earth can be eroded, literally washed away, in the course of time. Structures
in stone can, of course, be thrown down and dilapidated but the stones themselves
will endure, unless deliberately removed from the site.
Many of the monuments to be seen in the countryside, like many of the
artefacts we see in museums, are incomplete. Often the more valuable elements
have disappeared: the stone axe lacks its wooden haft, the earthen rampart
its timber palisade, the stone castle its wooden floors, the Georgian house
its roof.
Throughout Irish history and prehistory structural materials have dictated
the preservation of sites, monuments and artefacts. More recently, however,
human interference in the form of "development", along with simple neglect
and acts of war, has in many cases accelerated the pace of destruction.