Kiln - lime, Lagavooren, Co. Louth
Co. Louth |
Kilns
A limekiln is not, on the face of it, a remarkable thing.
Farmers and builders across Ireland used them for centuries to burn limestone and produce quicklime, a basic ingredient in mortar, plaster, and agricultural lime. What makes the one found at Lagavooren, in County Louth, quietly interesting is the shape of it, and the company it was keeping when it came to light.
Unearthed ahead of road construction, the kiln is cruciform in plan, a cross-shaped arrangement that sets it apart from the more common bowl or draw kilns of later periods. It was found alongside a stretch of medieval town wall, and the working assumption is that the two are directly connected: the kiln was most likely built and fired specifically to produce the lime mortar used in that wall's construction. The suggested date of use is the late thirteenth century, placing it in a period of considerable urban and defensive building activity in the region. That kind of on-site production was not unusual for ambitious building projects of the era; rather than transport lime over distance, builders would establish a kiln close to the work, burn their stone, and apply the resulting mortar while it was still manageable. What is less common is finding the kiln and the wall it served still in traceable association with one another.