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Specialist reports by Henry Welsh
Six trenches were manually excavated in 2011 at Ballyaghagan cashel as part of a wider project de... more Six trenches were manually excavated in 2011 at Ballyaghagan cashel as part of a wider project designed by the Belfast Hills Partnership to promote a greater awareness of the rich heritage of the Belfast hills. The cashel is unusual, in that the remains of a vernacular house sit partially across the enclosure at the north-west. The excavation established at least four phases of construction and occupation at this point and also revealed significant prehistoric activity.
R. Ó Baoill: ‘The Ceramic Assemblage’ and ‘The Clay Tobacco Pipe Assemblage’ in H. Welsh, ‘The Excavation of a Cashel at Ballyaghagan, Co. Antrim’, Ulster Journal of Archaeology, 72 (2013), pp 107-109. Published in 2016.
Three trenches were manually excavated in 2011 across the inner ward of Carrickfergus Castle, in ... more Three trenches were manually excavated in 2011 across the inner ward of Carrickfergus Castle, in advance of works to install an electricity supply to the ‘flash room’ corridor. The excavations revealed that undisturbed archaeological features may still be present in this part of the castle, despite repeated building and demolition over many centuries.
R. Ó Baoill: ‘The Ceramic Assemblage’, ‘The Glass Assemblage’ and ‘The Lithic (Stone) Assemblage’ in H. Welsh, ‘An excavation at the Inner Ward, Carrickfergus Castle, County Antrim’, Ulster Journal of Archaeology, 72 (2013), pp 182-184. Published in 2016.
Six trenches were manually excavated in 2011 at Ballyaghagan cashel as part of a wider project de... more Six trenches were manually excavated in 2011 at Ballyaghagan cashel as part of a wider project designed by the Belfast Hills Partnership to promote a greater awareness of the rich heritage of the Belfast hills. The cashel is unusual, in that the remains of a vernacular house sit partially across the enclosure at the north-west. The excavation established at least four phases of construction and occupation at this point and also revealed significant prehistoric activity.
R. Ó Baoill: ‘The Ceramic Assemblage’ and ‘The Clay Tobacco Pipe Assemblage’ in H. Welsh, ‘The Excavation of a Cashel at Ballyaghagan, Co. Antrim’, Ulster Journal of Archaeology, 72 (2013), pp 107-109. Published in 2016.
Three trenches were manually excavated in 2011 across the inner ward of Carrickfergus Castle, in ... more Three trenches were manually excavated in 2011 across the inner ward of Carrickfergus Castle, in advance of works to install an electricity supply to the ‘flash room’ corridor. The excavations revealed that undisturbed archaeological features may still be present in this part of the castle, despite repeated building and demolition over many centuries.
R. Ó Baoill: ‘The Ceramic Assemblage’, ‘The Glass Assemblage’ and ‘The Lithic (Stone) Assemblage’ in H. Welsh, ‘An excavation at the Inner Ward, Carrickfergus Castle, County Antrim’, Ulster Journal of Archaeology, 72 (2013), pp 182-184. Published in 2016.