Structure - peatland, Edercloon, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Ritual/Ceremonial
Beneath the bogland of Edercloon in County Longford, a scatter of worked wood has survived for over a thousand years in near-perfect preservation, held in place by the airless, acidic conditions that make Irish peatlands such extraordinary archives of the past.
The deposit is modest in scale, roughly two and a half metres long and a metre and a half wide, but what it contains tells a careful story: twenty-eight pieces of brushwood, two heavier roundwoods, and six uprights driven into the ground at varying angles, some vertical, some leaning at forty-five degrees. Several pieces still carry metal-cut toolmarks, clear evidence of deliberate construction rather than accidental accumulation.
A radiocarbon date taken from a single piece of ash within the structure places it somewhere between cal AD 640 and 860, a period spanning the later phases of early medieval Ireland, when the bog landscape was being actively managed and crossed by communities who knew it well. The structure sat 0.35 metres above the edge of a togher, a timber trackway laid across boggy ground to allow passage, and lay roughly two metres from a second deposit at the same level. Whether this cluster of features represents a working platform, a landing point along the trackway, or something else entirely is not fully resolved, but the proximity to the togher suggests a functional relationship, something built to serve people moving through a wet and difficult terrain rather than to mark or enclose a space.