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BAM and Cork City Council Launch ‘Below our Feet’ Exhibition of Cork’s Unearthed Viking History

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BAM and Cork City Council Launch ‘Below our Feet’ Exhibition of Cork’s Unearthed Viking History

BAM and Cork City Council Launch ‘Below our Feet’ Exhibition of Cork’s Unearthed Viking History
May 29
10:09 2018

A wealth of artefacts from the Viking era unearthed during BAM’s major development of the former Beamish & Crawford site in Cork city centre is being dislayed in partnership with Cork City Council, Cork Public Museum and University College Cork. The discoveries have yielded fascinating detail of the city’s origins, positioning Cork as one of the earliest Viking settlements in Ireland.

As it was not possible to allow the public on site during excavation, BAM has funded the ‘Below our Feet’ exhibition at Cork Public Museum at Fitzgerald’s Park that started on Friday 25th May and runs throughout the summer. The excavation undertaken by the renowned archaeologist Dr Maurice Hurley and his team on the site of the Cork Events Centre and new student accommodation at South Main Street revealed:

  • Evidence of the earliest urban layout recorded of Cork dated to 1070 AD,
  • the foundations of 19 wooden Viking Age houses from the 11th and 12th century,
  • three stone walls and a door way of St Laurence’s Church understood to be from the 13th century,
  • a perfectly preserved 1,000-year-old weaver’s sword featuring a carved human face,
  • a collection of spoons, ladles and buckets as well as a wooden thread-winder with the design of two horses’ heads carved into it.

Commenting on the exhibition Theo Cullinane, CEO of BAM Ireland, said: “The discovery of artefacts at our development at the former Beamish & Crawford site gives a flavour of life and society of Viking era Cork and the historical importance the city played during this age. Cork is of huge importance to BAM – we are honoured to have played a central role in developing the modern city and now also helping to reveal a hidden chapter of its past.”

Reconstructed Viking era house.

Ann Doherty, CE of Cork City Council, said: “This exhibition offers the people of Cork fascinating new detail on the historic spine of our city and its Viking past. We’re encouraging people to visit the Cork Public Museum and Fitzgerald’s Park over the summer to view the exhibition.”

Dr Maurice Hurley added: “The preservation of a great variety of wooden structures and objects of the late Viking age has been the greatest reward and cultural gain from the excavation in the medieval levels of Cork City. I hope the exhibition will be to the enjoyment of scholars and residents of Cork fascinated by the Viking era.”

A team of archaeologists excavated the site between November 2016 and March 2018 on behalf of BAM.

The excavation produced evidence of the earliest urban layout of Cork City discovered to date with the first houses on the site built around 1070 AD. The lowest excavated features were 4 m (or 12 ft) below the level of South Main Street today and excavated strata represented almost every period from the history and development of Cork.

The exhibition aims to highlight some of the findings with emphasis on the earliest excavated levels dating from the 11th and 12th centuries and the Late Viking-Age or Hiberno-Norse era, a period when the cultural sphere experienced a mixture of Scandinavian and Native Irish influence.

Also on display will be the wooden structures and items recovered from the excavations that reveal 12th century Cork as a wooden town where all the houses and many of the objects in everyday use were made from wood.

The exhibition, which shines a light on the Vikings’ housing, clothing, cooking methods and religious practices was prepared by Dr Maurice Hurley and his staff in conjunction with the students of the MA course in museum studies at University College Cork.

Cork Public Museum is within walking distance of Cork city and holds exhibits that trace over 7,000 years of human settlement in Cork. The museum showcases the city’s rich civic, political, military, social and cultural history.

BAM Ireland has helped to shape the infrastructure of Ireland for the past 60 years through its principal activities of building contracting and civil engineering in the public, private and PPP sectors. Other activities include facilities management, property development and rail infrastructure. It currently employs over 2,000 people directly and indirectly.

CAPTION:

Cork City Council CE Ann Doherty and BAM CEO Theo Cullinane were among those to officially launch the ‘Below our Feet’ Viking Exhibition at Cork Public Museum, which is funded by BAM. Artefacts dating back to 1070 AD were among those discovered at the former Beamish & Crawford site currently being developed by BAM. Picture: Michael O’Sullivan/OSM Photo.


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