Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-t5pn6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-16T01:03:31.350Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Regional Variation in Irish Pre-Romanesque Architecture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2011

Extract

This paper demonstrates that the five Irish early medieval church types have markedly differential distributions. In particular, most of those with antae are in the east, while most of those without antae are in the west. It is shown that this regionalism cannot be interpreted as a deliberate strategy of material differentiation on the part of particular politico-cultural groups. A reconsideration of the chronology suggests that many of the antae-less churches are relatively late, and so the division is primarily indicative of differences in the period and rate of mortared church construction, something that is influenced by both environmental and cultural factors. It is suggested that differences in church dimensions between east and west are indicative of subtle economic differences; and a range of archaeological evidence is used to sketch other economic and cultural variations. These patterns highlight the importance of exploring regionality, even when studying relatively cohesive entities such as early medieval Ireland.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ahlqvist, A 1988. ‘Remarks on the question of dialects in Old Irish’, in Historical Dialectology, Regional and Social (ed Fisiak, J), 2338, BerlinGoogle Scholar
Aitchison, N B 1994. Armagh and the Royal Centres in Early Medieval Ireland: Monuments, Cosmology, and the Past, WoodbridgeGoogle Scholar
Andrews, J H 1984. ‘A geographer's view of Irish history’, in The Course of Irish History (eds Moody, T W and Martin, F X), 1729, DublinGoogle Scholar
Barrett, G F and Graham, B J 1975. ‘Some considerations concerning the dating and distribution of ring-forts in Ireland’, Ulster J Archaeol, 38, 3345Google Scholar
Barrett, J, Beukens, R, Simpson, I, Ashmore, P, Poaps, S and Huntley, J 2000. ‘What was the Viking Age and when did it happen? A view from Orkney’, Norwegian Archaeol Rev, 33, 139CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, J C 1981. ‘Aspects of the Iron Age in Atlantic Scotland. A case study in the problems of archaeological interpretation’, Proc Soc Antiq Scot, III, 205–19Google Scholar
Barrow, G L 1979. The Round Towers of Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
Barry, T B 1981. ‘Archaeological excavations at Dunbeg promontory fort, Co Kerry, 1977’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 81C, 295329Google Scholar
Bateson, J D 1973. ‘Roman material from Ireland’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 73C, 2197Google Scholar
Berger, R 1992. ‘14C-dating mortar in Ireland’, Radiocarbon, 34, 880-9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berger, R 1995. ‘Radiocarbon dating of early medieval Irish monuments’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 95C, 159–74Google Scholar
Bethell, D 1971. ‘English monks and Irish reform in the eleventh and twelfth centuries’, Hist Stud, 8, 111–35Google Scholar
Bhreathnach, E 1999. ‘The construction of the stone fort at Cahercommaun: a historical hypothesis’, Discovery Programme Rep, 5, 8391. DublinGoogle Scholar
Blair, J 1988. ‘Introduction: from minster to parish church’, in Blair, (ed) 1988, 120Google Scholar
J, Blair (ed) 1988. Minsters and Parish Churches: The Local Church in Transition 950-1200, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Blair, J 1996. ‘Churches in the early English landscape: social and cultural contexts’, in Church Archaeology: Research Directions for the Future (eds Blair, J and Pyrah, C), 618, YorkGoogle Scholar
Bonner, G 2002. ‘The Pelagian controversy in Britain and Ireland’, in Peritia, 16, 144–55Google Scholar
Bradley, J 1998. ‘The monastic town of Clonmacnoise’, in Clonmacnoise Studies 1 (ed King, H), 4256, DublinGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R and Chapman, R 1986. ‘The nature and development of long-distance relations in later Neolithic Britain and Ireland’, in Renfrew, and Cherry, (eds) 1986, 127–36Google Scholar
Brash, R 1868. The Ecclesiastical Architecture Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
Brown, G B 1925. The Arts in Early England II: Anglo-Saxon Architecture, 2nd edn, LondonGoogle Scholar
Brown, P 2002. The Rise of Western Christendom, 2nd edn, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Buckley, V M 1986. ‘Ulster and Oriel souterrains an indicator of tribal areas?’, Ulster J Archaeol, 49, 108–10Google Scholar
Byrne, F J 1958. ‘The Eóganacht Ninussa’, Eigse, 9, 1829Google Scholar
Byrne, F J 1971. ‘Tribes and tribalism in early Ireland’, Eriu, 22, 128–64Google Scholar
Byrne, F J 1973. Irish Kings and High-Kings, LondonGoogle Scholar
Byrne, F J 1984. ‘Churches and monasteries c 900’, in A New History of Ireland IX -Maps, Genealogies, Lists (eds Moody, T W, Martin, F X and Byrne, F J), OxfordGoogle Scholar
Cameron, A 1998. ‘Coursed adobe architecture, style, and social boundaries in the American southwest’, in The Archaeology of Social Boundaries (ed Stark, M), 183207, LondonGoogle Scholar
Campbell, E 1996a. ‘Trade in the Dark-Age West: a peripheral activity?’, in Scotland in Dark Age Britain (ed Crawford, B E), 7992, AberdeenGoogle Scholar
Campbell, E 1996b. ‘The archaeological evidence for contacts: imports, trade and economy in Celtic Britain AD 400-800’, in External Contacts and the Economy of Late Roman Post-Roman Britain (ed Dark, K R), 8396, WoodbridgeGoogle Scholar
Carroll, L 1999. Irish Pilgrimage. Holy Wells and Popular Catholic Devotion, LondonGoogle Scholar
Carver, M 1998. ‘Conversion and politics on the eastern seaboard of Britain: some archaeological indicators’, in Conversion and Christianity in the North Sea World (ed Crawford, B), 1140, St AndrewsGoogle Scholar
Carver, M 1999. ‘Exploring, explaining, imagining: Anglo-Saxon archaeology 1998’, in The Archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England: Basic Readings (ed Karkov, C E), 2552, LondonGoogle Scholar
Carver, M 2001. ‘Why that? Why there? Why then? The politics of early medieval monu-mentality’, in Image and Power in Early Medieval Britain. Essays in Honour of Rosemary Cramp (eds MacGregor, A and Hamerow, H), 122, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Champion, T 1989. ‘Introduction’, in Centre and Periphery. Comparative Studies in Archaeology (ed Champion, T), 121, LondonGoogle Scholar
Champion, T and Champion, S 1986. ‘Peer polity interaction in the European Iron Age’, in Renfrew, and Cherry, (eds) 1986, 5968Google Scholar
Champneys, A 1910. Irish Ecclesiastical Architecture, ShannonGoogle Scholar
Charles-Edwards, T. M. 1976. ‘The social background to Irish peregrinatio’, Celtica, 11, 4359Google Scholar
Charles-Edwards, T. M. 1992. ‘The pastoral role of the church in the early Irish laws’, in Pastoral Care Before the Parish (eds Blair, J and Sharpe, R), 6380, LeicesterGoogle Scholar
Charles-Edwards, T M 2000. Early Christian Ireland, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clapham, A 1952. ‘Some minor Irish cathedrals’, in Papers by Sir Alfred Clapham with a Memoir and Bibliography (Archaeol J volume 106, for the year 1949, supplement, memorial volume to Sir Alfred Clapham), 1639, LondonGoogle Scholar
H B, Clarke, Ni Mhaonaigh, M and Ó Floinn, R (eds) 1998. Ireland and Scandinavia in the Early Viking Age, DublinGoogle Scholar
Clifton-Taylor, A 1987. The Pattern of English Building, 4th edn, LondonGoogle Scholar
Clinton, M 2001. The Souterrains of Ireland, BrayGoogle Scholar
Cooney, G 2000. ‘Recognising regionality in the Irish Neolithic’, in New Agendas in Irish Prehistory (eds Desmond, A, Johnson, G, McCarthy, M, Sheehan, J and Twohig, E Shee), 4965, BrayGoogle Scholar
Cotter, C 1992. ‘Western stone fort project interim report’, Discovery Programme Rep I, 1-19, DublinGoogle Scholar
Cotter, C 1995. ‘Archaeological excavations at Skeam West’, Mizen J, 3, 71–8Google Scholar
Cramp, R 1976. ‘Monastic sites’, in The Archaeology of Anglo-Saxon England (ed Wilson, D M), 201–52, LondonGoogle Scholar
Cronin, R 1998. ‘Late high crosses in Munster: tradition and novelty in twelfth-century Irish art’, in Monk, and Sheehan, (eds) 1998, 138–47Google Scholar
Cuppage, J 1986. Archaeological Survey of the Dingle Peninsula, BallyferriterGoogle Scholar
Davies, R R 1987. Conquest, Co-existence, and Change in Wales 1063-1415, OxfordGoogle Scholar
De Paor, L 1967. ‘Cormac's Chapel: the beginnings of Irish Romanesque’, in North Munster Studies: Essays in Commemoration of Monsignor Michael Moloney (ed Rynne, E), 133–45, LimerickGoogle Scholar
De Paor, L 1987. ‘The high crosses of Tech Theille (Tihilly), Kinnitty, and related sculpture’, in Figures from the Past: Studies on Figurative Art in Christian Ireland (ed Rynne, E), 131–58, Dun LaoghaireGoogle Scholar
De Paor, M and De Paor, L 1958. Early Christian Ireland, NorwichGoogle Scholar
Doherty, C 1980. ‘Exchange and trade in early medieval Ireland’, J Roy Soc Antiq Ir, 110, 6789Google Scholar
Doherty, C 1985. ‘The monastic town in early medieval Ireland’, in The Comparative History of Urban Origins in non-Roman Europe (eds Clarke, B and Simms, A), 4575, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Doherty, C 1998. ‘The Vikings in Ireland: a review’, in Clarke, et al (eds) 1998, 288330Google Scholar
Doherty, C 2000. ‘Settlement in early Ireland: a review’, in A History of Settlement in Ireland (ed Barry, T), 5080, LondonGoogle Scholar
Dolley, R H and Ingold, J 1961. ‘Viking Age coin-hoards from Ireland and their relevance to Anglo-Saxon studies’, in Anglo-Saxon Coins (ed Dolley, R H), 241–65, LondonGoogle Scholar
Driscoll, S 1988. ‘The relationship between history and archaeology: artefacts, documents and power’, in Power and Politics in Early Medieval Britain and Ireland (eds Driscoll, S and Neike, M), 162–87, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Driscoll, S 2000. ‘Christian monumental sculpture and ethnic expression in early Scotland’, in Social Identity in Early Medieval Britain (eds Frazer, W and Tyrrell, A), 233–52, LeicesterGoogle Scholar
Dunraven, E 1875. Notes on Irish Architecture, LondonGoogle Scholar
Edwards, N 1990. The Archaeology of Early Medieval Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
Empey, A 2002. ‘The layperson in the parish: the medieval in heritance, 1169-1536’, in The Laity and the Church of Ireland, 1000-2000 (eds Gillespie, R and Neely, W G), 748, DublinGoogle Scholar
Etchingham, C 1993. ‘The implications of par-uchia’, Eriu, 44, 139–62Google Scholar
Etchingham, C 1999. Church Organisation in Ireland AD 650 to 1000, MaynoothGoogle Scholar
Fanning, T 1981. ‘Excavation of an early Christian cemetery and settlement at Reask, Co. Kerry’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 81C, 67172Google Scholar
Fernie, E 1983. The Architecture of the Anglo-Saxons, LondonGoogle Scholar
Fitzpatrick, E and O'Brien, C 1998. The Medieval Churches of County Offaly, DublinGoogle Scholar
Geake, H 1997. The use of grave-goods in conver sion-period England, C.600-C.850, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geake, H 1999. ‘Invisible kingdoms: the use of grave-goods in seventh-century England’, in The Making of Kingdoms (eds Dickinson, T and Griffiths, D), 203–15, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Geary, P J 1994. Living with the Dead in the Middle Ages, CornellCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gem, R 1988. ‘The English parish church in the eleventh and early twelfth centuries: a great rebuilding’, in Blair, (ed) 1988, 2130Google Scholar
Gem, R 2001. ‘St Flannan's church at Killaloe and the beginnings of Romanesque architecture in Ireland’, lecture for the conference Reform and Renewal: Ireland in the Twelfth Century, University College Cork, 13 October 2001Google Scholar
Gerriets, M 1985. ‘Money among the Irish: coin hoards in Viking age Ireland’, J Roy Soc Antiq Ir, 115, 121–39Google Scholar
Gibbons, E 1998. ‘Cathair Fionnurach (Cathair a Bhoghasin), Ballynavenooragh, Co. Kerry’, in Excavations 1997: Summary Accounts of Archaeological Excavations in Ireland (ed Bennett, I), 30–1, DublinGoogle Scholar
Goodby, R G 1998. ‘Technological patterning and social boundaries: ceramic variability in southern New England, AD 1000-1675’, in The Archaeology of Social Boundaries (ed Stark, M), 161–82, LondonGoogle Scholar
Gosden, C and Lock, G 1998. ‘Prehistoric histories’, World Archaeology, 30, 212Google Scholar
Gosling, P 1993. Archaeological Inventory of County Galway Volume 1: West Galway, DublinGoogle Scholar
Graham, B J 1993. ‘Early medieval Ireland: settlement as an indicator of economic and social transformation, c 500-1100 AD’, in Graham, and Proudfoot, (eds) 1993, 1957Google Scholar
B J, Graham and Proudfoot, L J (eds) 1993. An Historical Geography of Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
Griffiths, D 1992. ‘Territories and exchange in the Irish Sea region 400-1100’, in Exchange and Trade, Medieval Europe 1992 (eds Hall, R, Hodges, R and Clarke, G), 912, YorkGoogle Scholar
Hamlin, A 1984. ‘The study of early Irish churches’, in Ireland and Europe: The Early Church (eds Chatham, P Ni and Richter, M), 117–26, StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Hamlin, A 1985. ‘The archaeology of the Irish Church in the eighth century’, Peritia, 4, 279–99Google Scholar
Hamlin, A 1997. ‘The early Church in County Down to the twelfth century’, in Down: History and Society (ed Proudfoot, L), 4770, DublinGoogle Scholar
Hammond, R F 1981. The Peatlands of Ireland. To Accompany New Peatland Map of Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
Harbison, P 1970. ‘How old is Gallarus oratory?’, Medieval Archaeol, 14, 34–5Google Scholar
Harbison, P 1972. ‘Some Romanesque heads from County Clare’, N Minister Antiq J, 15, 37Google Scholar
Harbison, P 1982. ‘Early Irish churches’, in Die Iren und Europa im früheren Mittelalter (ed Lowe, H), 618–29, StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Harbison, P 1991. Pilgrimage in Ireland: the Monuments and the People, LondonGoogle Scholar
Harbison, P 1992. The High Crosses of Ireland: Iconographical and Photographic Survey, BonnGoogle Scholar
Harbison, P 1993. ‘A high cross base from the Rock of Cashel and a historical reconsideration of the “Ahenny group” of crosses’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 93C, 120Google Scholar
Harbison, P 1999. The Golden Age of Irish Art, LondonGoogle Scholar
Hare, M and Hamlin, A 1986. ‘The study of early church architecture in Ireland: an Anglo-Saxon viewpoint’, in The Anglo-Saxon Church. Papers on History, Architecture and Archaeol ogy in Honour of Dr H. M. Taylor (eds Butler, L A S and Morris, R K), CBA Res Rep 60, 131-45, LondonGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, J 2001. ‘An iconography of identity? The cross-head from Mayo Abbey’, in From Ireland Coming. Irish Art from the Early Christian to the Late Gothic Period and its European Context (ed Hourihane, C), 211–48, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Hayden, A 1994. ‘Coarha More, Valentia Island: Bronze Age settlement’, in Excavations 1993: Summary Accounts of Archaeological Excava tions in Ireland (ed Bennet, I), 42–3, DublinGoogle Scholar
Henderson, I and Okasha, E 1992. ‘The Early Christian inscribed and carved stones of Tullylease, Co. Cork’, Cambridge Medieval Celtic Stud, 24, 136Google Scholar
Henry, F 1964. Irish High Crosses, Dublin Henry, F 1970. Irish Art in the Romanesque Period 1020-1170 A.D., LondonGoogle Scholar
Herity, M 1984. ‘The layout of Irish Early Christian monasteries’, in Ireland and Europe: The Early Church (eds Chathain, P Ni and Richter, M), 105–16, StuttgartGoogle Scholar
Herren, M and Brown, S 2002. Christ in Celtic Christianity, Suffolk Hodder, I 1982. Symbols in Action: Ethnoarchaeo logical Studies of Material Culture, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hodder, I 1991. Reading the Past: Current Approaches to Interpretation in Archaeology, 2nd edn, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hodder, I 1999. The Archaeological Process: Introduction, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Hogan, J 1929. ‘The Tricha Cet and related land-measures’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 28C, 148235Google Scholar
Hughes, K 1958. ‘The distribution of Irish scriptoria and centres of learning from 730 to 1111’, in Studies in the Early British Church (ed Chadwick, N), 243–69, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hughes, K 1971. ‘Evidence for contacts between the Churches of the Irish and English from the Synod of Whitby to the Viking Age’, in England before the Conquest. Studies in Primary Sources presented to Dorothy Whitelock (eds Clemoes, P and Hughes, K), 4969, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Hughes, K and Hamlin, A 1977. The Modern Traveller to the Early Irish Church, DublinGoogle Scholar
Hurley, V 1982. ‘The early Church in the southwest of Ireland: settlement and organisation’, in The Early Church in Western Britain and Ireland (ed Pearse, S M), 297332, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jones, S 1996. ‘Discourses of identity in the interpretation of the past’, in Cultural Identity and Archaeology: The Construction of European Communities (eds Graves-Brown, P, Jones, S and Gamble, C), 6280, LondonGoogle Scholar
Jones, S 1997. The Archaeology of Ethnicity: Constructing Identities in the Past and Present, LondonGoogle Scholar
Jope, M 1964. ‘The Saxon building stone industry in southern England’, Medieval Archaeol, 8, 91118Google Scholar
Kelly, D 1991. ‘The heart of the matter: models for Irish high crosses’, J Roy Soc Antiq Ir, 121, 105–45Google Scholar
Kenney, J F 1929. The Sources for the Early History of Ireland: Ecclesiastical, DublinGoogle Scholar
Kenny, M 1987. ‘The geographical distribution of Irish Viking-age coin hoards’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 87C, 507–25Google Scholar
Kenny, M 1997. ‘Coins and coinage in the Irish midlands during the Viking Age’, in Studies in Insular Art and Archaeology (eds Karkov, C and Farrell, R), 111–16, CornellGoogle Scholar
Kinahan, G H 1889. The Economic Geology of Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
King, H 1997. ‘Burials and high crosses at Clonmacnoise’, in Death and Burial in Medieval Europe (eds Boe, G de and Veraeghe, F), 127–31, ZellikGoogle Scholar
Lacy, B 1983. Archaeological Survey of County Donegal, DublinGoogle Scholar
Laing, L 1985. ‘The romanization of Ireland in the fifth century’, Peritia, 4, 261–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lalor, B 1999. The Irish Round Tower: Origins and Architecture Explored, DublinGoogle Scholar
Lavelle, D 1994. Ballinrobe & District: An Archaeological Survey, CastlebarGoogle Scholar
Leask, H 1936-1939. ‘The characteristic features of Irish architecture from early times to the twelfth century’, N Minister Antiq J, 1, 1021Google Scholar
Leask, H 1938. ‘Tullylease Co Cork: its church and monuments’, J Cork Hist Archaeol Soc, 43, 101–8Google Scholar
Leask, H 1955. Irish Churches and Monastic Buildings, I, DundalkGoogle Scholar
Leask, H 1960a. Irish Churches and Monastic Buildings, II, DundalkGoogle Scholar
Leask, H 1960b. Irish Churches and Monastic Buildings, III, DundalkGoogle Scholar
Leroi-Gourhan, A 1993. Gesture and Speech, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Lynn, C 1975. ‘The medieval ringfort an archaeological chimera?’, Irish Archaeol Res Forum, 2, 2936Google Scholar
MacDonald, A D S 1981. ‘Notes on monastic archaeology and the annals of Ulster, 650-1050’, in Irish Antiquity Essays and Studies presented to Professor M. J. OKelly (ed Corrain, D Ó), 304–20, CorkGoogle Scholar
Macalister, R A S 1928. The Archaeology of Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
MacNeill, T 1911. ‘Early Irish population-groups: their nomenclature, classification, and chronology’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 29, 59114Google Scholar
McNeill, T 1997. Irish Castles. Feudal Power in a Gaelic World, LondonGoogle Scholar
Mac Shamhrain, A 1996. Church and Polity in Pre-Norman Ireland: the Case of Glendalough, MaynoothGoogle Scholar
Manning, C 1991. ‘Cahergal, Kimego West: stone fort’, in Excavations 1990: Summary Accounts of Archaeological Excavations in Ireland (ed Bennett, I), 37, DublinGoogle Scholar
Manning, C 1992. ‘Cahergal, Kimego West: stone fort’, in Excavations 1991: Summary Accounts of Archaeological Excavations in Ireland (ed Bennett, I), 24–5, DublinGoogle Scholar
Manning, C 1998. ‘Clonmacnoise Cathedral’, in Clonmacnoise Studies I. Seminar Papers 1994 (ed King, H), 5686, DublinGoogle Scholar
Manning, C 2000. ‘References to church buildings in the Annals’, in Seanchas Studies in Early and Medieval Irish Archaeology History and Literature in Honour of F J Byrne (ed Smyth, A P), 3752, DublinGoogle Scholar
Marquardt, W H and Crumley, C L 1987. ‘Theoretical issues in the analysis of spatial patterning’, in Regional Dynamics: Burgundian Landscapes in Historical Perspective (eds Crumley, C and Marquardt, W H), 118, San DiegoGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, F and Ryan, M 1997. Reading the Irish Landscape, 3rd edn, DublinGoogle Scholar
Monk, M A 1998. ‘Early medieval secular and ecclesiastical settlement in Munster’, in Monk, and Sheehan, (eds) 1998, 3352Google Scholar
M A, Monk and Sheehan, J (eds) 1998. Early Medieval Munster. Archaeology, History and Society, CorkGoogle Scholar
Moore, M J 1984. ‘Irish cresset-stones’, J Roy Soc Antiq Ir, 114, 98116Google Scholar
Morris, R 1988. ‘Churches in York and its hinterland: building patterns and stone sources in the 11th and 12th centuries’, in Blair, (ed) 1988, 191–9Google Scholar
Morris, R 1989. Churches in the Landscape, LondonGoogle Scholar
Mytum, H 1992. The Origins of Early Christian Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
Neuman de Vegvar, C 2003. ‘Romanitas and Realpolitik in Cogitosus's description of the church of St. Brigit, Kildare’, in The Cross Goes North: Processes of Conversion in Northern Europe, AD300-1300 (ed Carver, M), 153–70, WoodbridgeGoogle Scholar
Ni Ghabhlain, S 1995. ‘Church, parish and polity: the medieval diocese of Kilfenora, Ireland’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of California, Los AngelesGoogle Scholar
Ó Carragain, T 2002. ‘Pre-Romanesque churches in Ireland. Interpreting archaeological region-alisms’, unpublished PhD thesis, University College, CorkGoogle Scholar
Ó Carragain, T 2003. ‘A landscape converted: archaeology and early Church organisation on Iveragh and Dingle, Ireland’, in The Cross Goes North Processes of Conversion in Northern Europe, AD300-1300 (ed Carver, M), 127–52, SuffolkGoogle Scholar
Ó Carragain, T 2005a. ‘Habitual masonry styles and the organisation of church building in early medieval Ireland’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 105CGoogle Scholar
Ó Carragain, T 2005b. ‘Church buildings and pastoral care in early medieval Ireland’, in The Parish in Medieval and Early Modern Ireland, Group for the Study of Irish Historic Settlement Monographs (eds Gillespie, R, Fitzpatrick, E and Doherty, C), DublinGoogle Scholar
Ó Carragain, Tforthcoming. Pre-Romanesque Churches in Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
O'Conor, K D 1998. The Archaeology of Medieval Rural Settlement in Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
J W, O'Connell and Korff, A (eds) 1991. The Book of the Burren, Kinvara O Corrain, D 1972. Ireland before the Normans, DublinGoogle Scholar
Ó Corrain, D 1974. ‘Caithreim Chellachdin Chaisil: history or propaganda?’, Eriu, 25, 169Google Scholar
Ó Corrain, D 1978. ‘Nationality and kingship in pre-Norman Ireland’, in Nationality and the Pursuit of National Independence (ed Moody, T W), 135, BelfastGoogle Scholar
Ó Corrain, D 1980. ‘Review of F. J. Byrne 1973 Irish Kings and High-Kings’, Celtica, 8, 150–68Google Scholar
Ó Corrain, D 1985. ‘Irish origin legends and genealogy: recurrent aetiologies’, in History and Heroic Tale: A Symposium (ed Nyberg, T), 5196, OdenseGoogle Scholar
Ó Corrain, D 1998. ‘Viking Ireland after thoughts’, in Clarke, et al (eds) 1998, 421–52Google Scholar
Ó Croinin D 1989. ‘Introduction: Ireland and the Celtic kingdoms of Britain’, in ‘The Work of Angels’:, Masterpieces of Celtic Metalzvork, 9th centuries AD (ed Youngs, S), 1117, LondonGoogle Scholar
Ó Croinin, D 1995. Early Medieval Ireland 400-1200, DublinGoogle Scholar
Ó Donnabhain, B 2001. ‘Immigrants and indigenes: morphological variability and Irish-Viking interactions in the early historic period’, unpublished PhD thesis, University of ChicagoGoogle Scholar
O'Flaherty, B 1986. ‘Loher cashel’, in Excavations 1985: Summary Accounts of Archaeological Excavations in Ireland (ed Bennett, I), 26–7, DublinGoogle Scholar
Ó Floinn, R 1995. ‘Clonmacnoise: art and patronage in the early medieval period’, in From the Isles of the North Early Medieval Art in Ireland and Britain (ed Bourke, C), 251–60, BelfastGoogle Scholar
Ó Floinn, R 1998. ‘The archaeology of the early Viking Age in Ireland’, in Clarke, et al (eds) 1998, 131–65Google Scholar
O'Keeffe, T 1991. ‘La facade romane en Irlande’, Cahiers de civilisation médievale, 34, 357–65Google Scholar
O'Keeffe, T 1994. ‘Lismore and Cashel: reflections on the beginnings of Romanesque architecture in Munster’, J Roy Soc Antiq Ir, 124, 118–52Google Scholar
O'Keeffe, T 1996. ‘Rural settlement and cultural identity in Gaelic Ireland, 1000-1500’, Ruralia I, Pamtky Archeologick Supplementum, 5, 142–53, PragueGoogle Scholar
O'Keeffe, T 1998. ‘Architectural traditions of the early medieval church in Munster’, in Monk, and Sheehan, (eds) 1998, 112–24Google Scholar
O'Keeffe, T 2000. Medieval Ireland: An Archaeology, Stroud.Google Scholar
O'Keeffe, T 2003. Romanesque Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
O'Keeffe, T 2005. ‘The built environment of local community worship between the late eleventh and early thirteenth centuries’, in The Parish in Medieval and Early Modern Ireland, Group for the Study of Irish Historic Settlement Monographs (eds Gillespie, R, Fitzpatrick, E and Doherty, C), DublinGoogle Scholar
O'Kelly, M J 1956. ‘An island settlement at Beginish, Co. Kerry’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 57C, 159–94Google Scholar
O'Kelly, M J 1958. ‘Church Island near Valencia, Co. Kerry’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 59C, 57136Google Scholar
Ó Riain, P 1972. ‘Boundary association in early Irish society’, Studia Celtica, 7, 1229Google Scholar
Ó Riain, P 1995. ‘Pagan example and Christian practice: a reconsideration’, in Cultural Identity and Cultural Integration: Ireland and Europe in the Early Middle Ages (ed Edel, D), 144–56, DublinGoogle Scholar
Ó Riordain, S P and Foy, J B 1941. ‘The excavation of Leacanabuaile stone fort, near Caherciveen, Co. Kerry’, J Cork Hist Archaeol Soc, 46, 8599Google Scholar
O'Sullivan, A and Sheehan, J 1996. The Iveragh Peninsula. An Archaeological Survey of South Kerry, CorkGoogle Scholar
O'Sullivan, J 1998. ‘Nationalists, archaeologists and the myth of the Golden Age’, in Monk, and Sheehan, (eds) 1998, 178–89Google Scholar
Parsons, D 1990. ‘Review and prospect: the stone industry in Roman, Anglo-Saxon and medieval England’, in Stone Quarrying and Building in England AD 43-1525 (ed Parsons, D), 116, ChichesterGoogle Scholar
Patterson, N 1994. Cattle-Lords and Clansmen: The Social Structure of Early Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
Peers, C R 1901. ‘On Saxon churches of the St. Pancras type’, Archaeol J, 58, 402–34Google Scholar
Peers, C R and Clapham, A W 1930. ‘Interim report on the excavations at Glastonbury Abbey’, Antiq J, 10, 24–9Google Scholar
Petrie, G 1845. The Ecclesiastical Architecture of Ireland, 2nd edn, DublinGoogle Scholar
Power, D 1992. Archaeological Inventory of County Cork, 1: West Cork, DublinGoogle Scholar
Power, D 1994. Archaeological Inventory of County Cork, 2: East and South Cork, DublinGoogle Scholar
Power, D 1997. Archaeological Inventory of County Cork, 3: Mid Cork, DublinGoogle Scholar
Power, D 2000. Archaeological Inventory of County Cork, 4: North Cork, DublinGoogle Scholar
Radford, R 1962. ‘The Church in Celtic Britain’, in Estratto dagli Atti del VI Congresso Inter-nazionale di Archaeologia Christiana, 4350, RavennaGoogle Scholar
Radford, R 1977. ‘The earliest Irish churches’, Ulster J Archaeol, 40, 110.Google Scholar
Raftery, B 1994. Pagan Celtic Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
RCAHMS 1982. Argyll: An Inventory of the Monuments. Vol 4: Iona, Roy Comm Ancient Hist Monuments Scotland Inventories, EdinburghGoogle Scholar
Rees, A and Rees, B 1961. Celtic Heritage Ancient Tradition in Ireland and Wales, LondonGoogle Scholar
Renfrew, C 1986. ‘Introduction: peer polity interaction and socio-political change’, in Renfrew, and Cherry, (eds) 1986, 118Google Scholar
C, Renfrew and Cherry, J F (eds) 1986. Peer Polity Interaction and Socio-Political Change, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Rynne, C 1988. ‘The archaeology and technology of the horizontal-wheeled watermill, with special reference to Ireland’, unpublished PhD thesis, University College, CorkGoogle Scholar
Rynne, C 1998. ‘The craft of the millwright in early medieval Munster’, in Monk, and Sheehan, (eds) 1998, 87101Google Scholar
Shanks, M and Tilley, C 1992. Reconstructing Archaeology Theory and Practice, 2nd LondonGoogle Scholar
Sharpe, R 1984. ‘Some problems concerning the organisation of the Church in early medieval Ireland’, Peritia, 3, 230–70Google Scholar
Sharpe, R 1992. ‘Churches and communities in early medieval Ireland: towards a pastoral model’, in Pastoral Care Before the Parish (eds Blair, J and Sharpe, R), 81109, LeicesterGoogle Scholar
J, Shaw and Jameson, R (eds) 1999. A Dictionary of Archaeology, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Sheehan, J 1991. ‘Coiled armrings: an Hiberno-Viking silver armring type’, J Ir Archaeol, 6, 4153Google Scholar
Sheehan, J 2001. Caherlehillan Early Ecclesiastical Site, Co. Kerry, unpublished report lodged with the Irish Department of the Environment, Heritage and Local GovernmentGoogle Scholar
Sheehan, J 2004. ‘Social and economic integration in Viking-Age Ireland: the evidence of the hoards’, in Land, Sea and Home: Viking-Settlement in Britain and Ireland (eds Hines, J, Lane, A and Redknap, M), Soc Medieval Archaeol Monogr Ser 20, 177–88, LondonGoogle Scholar
Simms, A 1980. ‘The origins of the diocese of Clogher’, Clogher Record, 10, 180–98Google Scholar
Simms, A 1988. ‘Core and periphery in medieval Europe: the Irish experience in a wider context’, in Common Ground (eds Smyth, W J and Whelan, K), 2240, CorkGoogle Scholar
Smith, J M H 1990. ‘Oral and written: saints, miracles and relics in Brittany, c 850-1250’, Speculum, 65, 309–43Google Scholar
Smyth, A P 1982. Celtic Leinster. Towards a Historical Geography of Early Irish Civilisation AD 500-1600, DublinGoogle Scholar
Smyth, W J 1993. ‘The making of Ireland: agendas and perspectives in cultural geography’, in Graham, and Proudfoot, (eds) 1993, 399438Google Scholar
Smyth, W J 1997. ‘A plurality of Irelands: regions, societies and mentalities’, in In Search of Ireland: A Cultural Geography (ed ham, B J Gra), 1942, LondonGoogle Scholar
Stalley, R 1997. ‘The Tower Cross at Kells’, in The Insular Tradition (eds Karkov, C, Farrell, R and Ryan, M), 115–42, AlbanyGoogle Scholar
Stalley, R 1999. Early Medieval Architecture, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Stalley, R 2000. ‘The construction of the medieval cathedral, c 1030-1250’, in Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin. A History (ed Milne, K), 53-74, DublinGoogle Scholar
M, Stokes (ed) 1875. ‘Introduction’, in Notes on Irish Architecture (by Edwin, , third Earl of Dunraven), i–xlv, LondonGoogle Scholar
Stokes, M 1878. Early Christian Architecture in Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
Stout, G and Stout, M 1997. ‘Early landscapes from prehistory to plantation’, in Atlas of the Irish Rural Landscape (eds Aalen, F H A, Whelan, K and Stout, M), 3163, CorkGoogle Scholar
Stout, M 1997. The Irish Ringfort, DublinGoogle Scholar
Swan, L 1983. ‘Enclosed ecclesiastical sites and their relevance to settlement patterns of the first millenium AD’, in Landscape Archaeology in Ireland (eds Reeves-Smyth, F and Hammond, F), 269–94, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Taylor, H M 1975. ‘Tenth-century church building in England and on the Continent’, in Tenth-century Studies. Essays in Commemoration of the Millennium of the Council of Winchester and Regularis Concordia (ed Parsons, D), 141–68, LondonGoogle Scholar
Taylor, H M 1978. Anglo-Saxon Architecture, in, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Taylor, P J 1977. Quantitative Methods in Geography. An Introduction to Spatial Analysis, BostonGoogle Scholar
Thomas, C 1981. Christianity in Roman Britain to AD 500, LondonGoogle Scholar
Thomas, C 1988. ‘The context of Tintagel: a new model for the diffusion of post-Roman imports’, Cornish Archaeol, 27, 725Google Scholar
Thomas, C 1990. ‘“Gallici Nautae de Galliarum Provinciis”, a sixth/seventh century trade with Gaul reconsidered’, Medieval Archaeol, 34, 126Google Scholar
Thomas, J 1996. Time, Culture and Identity: An Interpretive Archaeology, LondonGoogle Scholar
Toal, C 1995. North Kerry Archaeological Survey, DingleGoogle Scholar
Waddell, J 1998. The Prehistoric Archaeology of Ireland, Galway Wallerstein, I 1974. The Modern World-System, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Warner, R B 1976. ‘Some observations on the context and importation of exotic material in Ireland, from the first century BC to the second century AD’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 76C, 267–89Google Scholar
Warner, R B 1986. ‘Comments on “Ulster and Oriel souterrains”’, Ulster J Archaeol, 49, 111–12Google Scholar
Warren, W L 1969. ‘The interpretation of twelfth century Irish history’, in Historical Studies, VII (ed Beckett, J C), 119, LondonGoogle Scholar
Waterman, D M 1967. ‘The early Christian churches and cemetery at Derry, Co. Down’, Ulster J Archaeol, 30, 5375Google Scholar
Westropp, T J 1910. ‘A study of the early forts and stone huts in Inishmore, Aran Isles, Galway Bay’, Proc Roy Ir Acad, 28C, 174201Google Scholar
Whelan, K 1988. ‘The regional impact of Irish Catholicism, 1700-1850’, in Common Ground (eds Smyth, W and Whelan, K), 253–77, CorkGoogle Scholar
White Marshall, J and Walsh, C 1998. ‘Illaun-loughan, Co. Kerry: an island hermitage’, in Monk, and Sheehan, (eds) 1998, 102–11Google Scholar
Wooding, J M 1996. Communication and Commerce along the Western Sealanes AD400-800, OxfordGoogle Scholar