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The Forgotten Cemetery : Excavations at Ranelagh, Co Roscommon

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In the summer of 2015, archaeologists uncovered the remains of a previously unrecorded ringfort in the townland of Ranelagh just north of Roscommon town. Over the year that followed, excavations revealed a site which began in the fourth century as a simple defended farmstead, but which expanded considerably and changed emphasis over the centuries in line with the requirements of its inhabitants. Through this period, and beyond, the enclosure also functioned as a burial ground for these people and their extended family.

This latest entry in the TII Heritage Series—using a combination of traditional interpretative methods and the results of innovative scientific analysis techniques—tells not just the story of the Ranelagh site, but that of its inhabitants as a group, and as individuals. Techniques such as aDNA and isotopic analysis reveal details which more traditional methods could not hope to achieve on their from genetic backgrounds indicating far-reaching cultural ties, to the familial relationships between individuals interred in double burials.

Rarely does a single site provide as comprehensive a picture of early medieval and medieval societal makeup. Details regarding subsistence and farming practices, personal health, pregnancy and childcare, the treatment of the old and infirm, community and immigration, artefact manufacture and light industry, and of personal loss and burial practice were all revealed. In short, the Ranelagh site provides no less than a perspective on the fundamental realities of life and death in Ireland at this time.

Shane Delaney is a graduate of University College Cork. He has managed and directed archaeological excavations throughout Ireland and has published work on a number of his archaeological fieldwork projects. Shane is a Senior Archaeologist with IAC Archaeology and has worked as a Consultant in the UK and Slovakia. He lives in the Burren, County Clare.

Eileen Murphy is Professor of Archaeology in the School of Natural and Built Environment, Queen’s University Belfast. Her work uses approaches from bioarchaeology and funerary archaeology to help further understanding of the lives of people in the past. She has published widely and is the founding and current editor of the international journal, Childhood in the Past.

673 pages, Kindle Edition

Published May 14, 2023

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