Emania Vol. 8, Focus on Navan Complex (1991)

Emania Vol. 8, Focus on Navan Complex (1991)

15.00

Emania Vol. 7

Bulletin of the Navan Research Group

Focus on Navan Complex 1991

Emania is the premier interdisciplinary journal publishing original research on Ireland’s Celtic past. The main focus of the journal is on the Ulster Cycle of tales, the ancient ‘Royal Sites’ of Ireland and the archaeology and environment of Ireland in the period from the Late Bronze Age until the Early Medieval period.

Contents;

Hartwell, Barrie: Recent air survey results from Navan, 5-9.
Mallory, J.P.: Excavations at Haughey’s Fort: 1989-1990, 10-26.
McCormack, Finbar: The animal bones from Haughey’s Fort: second report, 27-33.
Hawthorne, Mark: A preliminary analysis of wood remains from Haughey’s Fort, 34-38.
Baillie, M.G.L. & Brown, D.M.: A dendro-date from Haughey’s Fort?, 39-40.
Lynn, C.J.: A burnt layer beside the King’s Stables, 41-42.
Warner, R.B.: The Drumconwell Ogham and its implications, 43-50.
Lynn, C.J.: Knockaulin (Dún Ailinne) and Navan: some architectural comparisons, 51-56.
McCormick, Finbar: Evidence of dairying at Dún Ailinne?, 57-59.
Toner, Gregory: Cormac Conloinges – the hero of the Mound, 60-62.

 

Emania 24 Focus On Mythic Landscapes

Emania 24 Focus On Mythic Landscapes

20.00

Contents

Waddell, John: Equine cults and Celtic goddesses, 5-18.

Hicks, Ronald: The rout of Ailill and Medbh: myth on the landscape, 19-34.

Fenwick, Joe: The late prehistoric ‘Royal Site’ of Rathcroghan, Co. Roscommon: an enduring paradigm of enclosed sacred space, 35-51.

McCarthy, Mike & Curley, Daniel: Exploring the nature of the Fráoch Saga – An examination of associations with the legendary warrior on Mag nAí, 53-62.

Warner, R.B.: Ptolemy’s River Winderis: a corrected identification, a sea-monster and Roman material from the adjacent sandhills, 63-67

Ó Drisceoil, Cóilín & Walsh, Aidan: New radiocarbon dates for the Black Pig’s Dyke at Aghareagh West and Aghnaskew, County Monaghan, 69-79.

Brandherm, Dirk; McSparron, Cormac; Kahlert, Thorsten & Bonsall, James: Topographical and geophysical survey at Knocknashee, Co. Sligo – Results from the 2016 campaign, 81-96.

Wilkinson, Anthony: Knocknashee – Local perceptions, 97-98.

McCafferty, Patrick: The fear of fairy forts: archaeological preservation by plague and superstition, 99-106.

Cover of Emania 25 (2020) Focus on Palaeodemographic Dynamics

Emania 25 (2020) Focus on Palaeodemographic Dynamics

20.00

Bulletin of the Navan Research Group Vol.25

Contents

McLaughlin, T. Rowan: An archaeology of Ireland for the Information Age, 7-29.
Baillie, Mike & Brown, David M.: Comments on the prehistoric section of McLaughlin’s human activity profiles as deduced from accumulated radiocarbon probabilities, 31-38.
Plunkett, Gill: A palynological perspective on “An archaeology of Ireland for the Information Age”, 39-43.
Cassidy, Lara M.: Sizing it up: a commentary on “An archaeology of Ireland for the Information Age”, 45-52.
Waddell, John: Early demographic ebb and flow in pre-census Ireland, 53-59.
McLaughlin, T. Rowan: A reply to Baillie, Cassidy, Plunkett and Waddell, 61-65.
Warner, Richard B.: Two bronze ‘pins’ from the Navan, Co. Armagh, ritual enclosure: reconciling a chronological enigma, 67-79.
Fenwick, Joe; Daly, Eve & Rooney, Shane: Rathcroghan revisited: a renewed archaeological and geophysical exploration of selected areas of the focal ritual complex, 81-98.
Johnston, Susan A.: New radiocarbon dates for Dún Ailinne, Co. Kildare, and their significance for understanding a ceremonial centre of the Irish Iron Age, 99-111.
Kelly, Eamonn P.: Knock Iveagh and Drumballyroney, Co. Down: investigation of a royal ritual landscape, 113-135.
Ruano, Lucía: Atlantic dwellings in the first millennium BC: a transnational approach to the social organization of space, 137-151.
Brandherm, Dirk; McSparron, Cormac & Boutoille, Linda: Excavations of Late Bronze Age roundhouses at Knocknashee, Co. Sligo: preliminary results from the 2017 campaign, 152-162.

Sligo Field Club Journal Vol.1

Sligo Field Club Journal Vol.1

20.00

Sligo Field Club was 70 years old in 2015 and to celebrate the occasion it has published the first volume of what it hopes will be an annual journal. There are 15 articles covering a period of 5,000 years.