Structure, Woodstown, Co. Waterford
Co. Waterford |
Utility Structures
Along the western bank of the River Suir in County Waterford lies one of the most significant Viking-age sites ever uncovered in Ireland, and within it, a small but telling structure that points to the practical, industrial side of Norse settlement. Excavations and geophysical survey carried out in 2007 identified a building of two phases within the wider Viking enclosure at Woodstown, with evidence suggesting it was probably associated with metal-working. That detail matters: it shifts the picture of the site away from simple raiding or trading and towards something more settled, a place where craft and production were taking place.
The Woodstown enclosure had already attracted considerable attention before the 2007 investigations, which were relatively small in scale but precise in what they revealed. As well as identifying the probable metal-working structure, the work clarified the eastern perimeter of the monument itself, helping to define the physical extent of the enclosure more accurately. A Viking enclosure of this kind, a defined and bounded settlement rather than a temporary camp, is unusual in the Irish archaeological record, and the presence of an industrial structure within it adds another layer to understanding how Norse communities organised themselves in ninth and tenth-century Ireland. Metal-working at such sites typically involved the smelting and smithing of iron or the working of non-ferrous metals like copper alloy, activities that required skilled labour and a degree of permanence.