Posted on 10/20/2004 2:02:41 PM PDT by blam
Full Excavation for Irish Viking Village?
By Rossella Lorenzi, Discovery News
Oct. 19, 2004 Preliminary work to build a bypass road in an Irish village has yielded what could be the most significant piece of Viking history in Europe: a virtually intact town that some have already called Ireland's equivalent of Pompeii.
Evidence for the ancient settlement was discovered last year by archaeologists testing areas ahead of road builders.
Located near the banks of the river Suir at Woodstown, five miles from the city of Waterford, the potential Viking town lies below pasture fields commonly used for horse grazing.
But it might end up forgotten below a bypass, according to a local action group who is calling for a full excavation.
"Fears are increasing that the minister for the environment will only order a 'rescue' excavation, a partial digging which will fail to unearth the full wonders of Woodstown," the Save Viking Waterford Action Group said in a statement.
According to a 2003 report by Ireland's National Roads Authority (NRA), the site "appears to represent a defended, riverside settlement, with outlying area of associated industrial activity."
"The historical references, the artifacts, and the radiocarbon dates confirm the site most likely dates within the Hiberno Norse Early Medieval period, 800-1100 A.D.," archaeologist Ian Russell wrote in the report.
An abundance of artifacts were uncovered during the test excavation. Findings included a broken sword, one spearhead, a battle axe, objects of iron, copper alloy, lead, gold, silver, stone, wood, lignite, glass and amber.
"Metal production and trade had a particular importance in the Viking settlement," Russell said.
Indeed, the archaeologist unearthed 170 lead weights, which represent the largest rural assemblage of such objects in Ireland.
Aerial pictures suggest that the settlement might be far bigger than previously thought: the entire Viking Woodstown, complete with streets and houses, could lie under the soil surface.
It is believed that up to 4,000 people lived there, while a fleet of 120 Viking ships might have occupied the Woodstown site in about 812.
"As Irish taxpayers we have been paying since April 2003 to investigate this site and as Irish citizens, we are eager to find out what knowledge has been gained," Catherine Swift, of the National University of Ireland and chair of the Waterford action group, said.
"After all this is part of all our pasts and it belongs to the local people, not to the government and certainly not to the private company which will eventually build the road," she said
Swift added that the National Museum, the Heritage Council, the NRA and academics and scholars from across Ireland and Europe have called for the full excavation.
"The discoveries at Woodstown are of major importance for the earliest Viking History in Ireland and the British Isles. A virtually undisturbed large Viking settlement of the mid and late 9th century has never been excavated in these parts of the world," Oslo University Viking expert Dagfinn Skre told Discovery News.
"The finds from the preliminary investigations have shown that a full excavation will contribute considerably to our knowledge of the early history of the Vikings," Skre said.
GGG Ping.
This is Bush's fault. John Kerry has a plan to keep Viking Villages firmly earthed. Wrong Village, Wrong Place, Wrong Time.
About that battle axe. . . Hillary . . . or TuhRAY zuh? J/K.
This is exciting news! Best of luck to the coalition of Irish groups trying to save the site! When I was in Dublin in 1979, a similar excavation was going on; don't know how that worked out, I never went back.
You'd be suprized how rare that stuff is. They have almost every large piece of Viking woodwork in a museum here in Oslo, named reasonably enough the "Viking Ship Museum."
The grand total "largish" artifacts come to:
3 Large Ships
2 Row Boats
2 Sheds
3 Sleds (endangered on account of early 20th centry preservation effort)
1 Wagon
So pretty much anything new pretty is HUGH. :)
"the archaeologist unearthed 170 lead weights"
The Vikings created a toxic waste site? How awful.
PING for the "Pillage People".
...The Vikings created a toxic waste site? How awful.....
It's Bush's fault!
Irish Viking? that's gotta be one hell of a accent. Sheesh.
I have both the "hiberno" and the "norse."
Not exactly sure which enriches the brew.
PING
Boo-yah! I'm one of them! My family hails from Sligo and everyone mistakes me for a Scandinavian.
My grandmother came from Sligo and she wouldn't be mistaken for a Swede.
Maybe some long lost relatives of yours???? ;)
Read Later BUMP!
Yes but did they unearth viking kitties ?
Finally a thread where viking kitties can live in peace and harmony and not have to be part of a zot.
We need pics of the ancient historic viking kitties, perhaps the viking kittie mummies.....
;-)
guns don't kill people, VIKINGS kill people!
berserkers of the world unite! all you can lose is your chains.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on, off, or alter the "Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list --
Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
The GGG Digest -- Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)
All of whom have requested absentee ballots from the state of Ohio.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.