Metalworking site, Doolargy, Co. Louth
Co. Louth |
Metalworking
In a field in Doolargy, County Louth, a handful of iron slag fragments quietly point to something that once generated considerable heat and noise.
Slag is the glassy, rock-like waste left behind when iron ore is smelted or worked, and its presence in an archaeological context is one of the more reliable indicators that metalworking of some kind took place nearby. It does not survive by accident; it survives because it is essentially indestructible, which makes it a useful, if modest, witness to industrial activity that might otherwise leave no trace at all.
The slag was recovered from within an enclosure, a defined and bounded space that would have served to organise activity on the site. Whether that enclosure was a farmstead, a workshop area, or something with a more specialised function is not certain, but the combination of a structured enclosure and ironworking debris suggests a settlement with some degree of productive capacity. Iron smelting and smithing were skilled trades in early medieval Ireland, and even small rural sites could support a forge or smelting hearth. The material evidence here is slight, but it is the kind of slight evidence that, in archaeology, carries genuine weight precisely because it was not planted or constructed; it was simply discarded and forgotten.