Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T07:52:22.790Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Historiography of the Irish Crannog: The Discovery of Lagore as Prologue to Wood-Martin's Lake Dwellings of Ireland of 1886

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 April 2011

Extract

The nineteenth century development of Irish crannog studies, attitudes to archaeological research and traits in public and private artefact collecting are examined through the parts played by several leading antiquaries and institutions in the 1839 discovery and later exploitation of Lagore, near Dunshaughlin, County Meath. Connections between Irish and Swiss antiquaries are noted, and contemporary attitudes to their respective ‘lake dwelling’ discoveries contrasted.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Andrews, J H 1975. A Paper Landscape: The Ordnance Survey in Nineteenth Century Ireland, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Anon 1840. Catalogue of the Irish, Roman, and British Antiquities in the Museum of the Late Dean of St. Patrick's Dublin, [— illegible], Webb and Chapman, Dublin. Annotated copy, Royal Irish Academy MS (SR) 23 K 63Google Scholar
Anon 1852. Descriptive Catalogue of the Collection of Antiquities and Other Objects Illustrative of Irish History, Exhibited in the Museum, Belfast, Brit Ass Advancement Sci, BelfastGoogle Scholar
Anon 1853. Official Catalogue of the Great Industrial Exhibition, J Falconer, DublinGoogle Scholar
Anon 1855. ‘Report on the proceedings of the Dublin Natural History Society’, Natur Hist Re., 11, 99100Google Scholar
Anon 1860. ‘Our weekly gossip’, The Athenaeu., 1726, 24 November, 714–15Google Scholar
Boyne, P 1987. John O'Donovan (1806–1861): A Biography, Clarabricken, KilkennyGoogle Scholar
Bradley, J 19851986. ‘Excavations at Moynagh Lough, 1984’, Riocht na Midhe., 7, 7892Google Scholar
Briggs, C S 1975. Review of Survey of the Megalithic Tombs of Ireland, III (1972), Irish Archaeol Res Forum, 2, 41–6Google Scholar
Briggs, C S 1978. ‘Dealing in antiquities in nineteenth century Dublin’, Dublin Hist Re., 31, 146–8Google Scholar
Briggs, C S 1979. ‘James Henry Underwood; first dealer in Irish antiquities’, Dublin Hist Re., 33, 2536Google Scholar
Briggs, C S, Guido, C M and Walsh, A 1986. ‘A neglected Viking burial with string-beads from Kilmainham, discovered in 1847’, Med Archaeo., 94108Google Scholar
Butler, R 1863. A Memoir of the Very Rev. Richard Butler, Dean of Clonmacnois and Vicar of Trim, Edinburgh, printed in by T Constable, not publishedGoogle Scholar
Cull, R 1860. ‘Ancient Lake Inhabitations’, The Athenaeum, 172., 27 November, 785Google Scholar
Eogan, G 1991. ‘Irish Antiquities of the Bronze Age, Iron Age and Early Christian Period in the National Museum of Denmark’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 91 (C), 6176Google Scholar
Graham-Campbell, J 1976. ‘The Viking-age silver hoards of Ireland’, in Proceedings of the Seventh Viking Congress (eds Almquist, B and Greene, D), 3974, DublinGoogle Scholar
Harding, A F 1980. The Lake Dwellings of Switzerland Retrospect and Prospect, Univ. Edinburgh Dept Archaeol Occas Pap 5Google Scholar
Hencken, H O'Neill 1942. ‘Ballinderry Crannog No. 2’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 47 (C), 176Google Scholar
Hencken, H O'Neill 1950. ‘Lagore Crannog: An Irish Royal Residence of the 7th to the 10th Centuries AD’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 53 (C), 1247Google Scholar
Herity, M 1969. ‘Irish antiquarian finds and collections of the early nineteenth century’, J Roy Soc Antiq Irelan., 99, 2137Google Scholar
Hermansen, V 1934. J J A Worsaae, En Oldgranskers Erindringer, CopenhagenGoogle Scholar
Herries Davies, G L 1983. Sheets of Many Colours: The Mapping of Ireland's Rocks 1750–1890, DublinGoogle Scholar
Hunter, M 1971. ‘The Royal Society and the origins of British Archaeology’, Antiquity, 45, 113–21 and 187–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ireland, A 1982. ‘The Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland 1849–1900’, J Roy Soc Antiq Irelan., 112, 7292Google Scholar
James, K 1986. ‘The geological career of the Third Earl of Enniskillen, (1807–1886)’, Clogher Recor., 12, 247–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keller, F 1854. ‘Die Keltischen Pfahlbauten in der Schweitzerseen’, Mittheilungen der Antiquarishen Gesellschaft in Zuric., 9, (II, heft 3)Google Scholar
Keller, F 1858. ‘Pfahlbauten, Zweiter bericht’, Mittheilungen der Antiquarishen Gesellschaft in Zuric., 9, (XII, heft 3), 129–63Google Scholar
Keller, F 1866. The Lake-Dwellings of Switzerland and other parts of Europe, (Lee, J, arr and transl), 2nd edn 1878Google Scholar
Kinahan, G H 1878. Manual of the Geology of Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
Lewis, S 1837. A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, LondonGoogle Scholar
Lubbock, J 1862. ‘The Swiss Lake Dwellings’, Natur Hist Re., JanuaryGoogle Scholar
Lubbock, J 1865. Prehistoric Times, 2nd, 3rd and 6th eds 1869, 1872, 1900, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lucas, A T 1968. ‘National Museum of Ireland: Archaeological Acquisitions in the Year 1965’, J Roy Soc Antiq Irelan., 98, 93159Google Scholar
Lyons, H 1944. The Royal Society 1660–1940, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Macalister, R A S 1928. The Archaeology of Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
Mason, W S 1816. A Statistical Survey of Ireland, DublinGoogle Scholar
Meenan, J and Clarke, D 1981. The Royal Dublin Society, DublinGoogle Scholar
McDowell, R B and Webb, D A 1982. Trinity College, Dublin: An Academic History, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, G F 1983. ‘Voices from the past; three antiquarian letters’, J Roy Soc Antiq Irelan., 113, 4752Google Scholar
Mitchell, G F 1985. ‘Antiquities’, in ó Rafertaigh, 93165Google Scholar
Mudge, W 1833. ‘Description of an ancient structure dug out of Drumkelin Bog, in the Parish of Inver, county of Donegal’, Archaeologi., 26, 361–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mulvany, T J 1852. ‘Notices of antiquities presented to the Royal Irish Academy by W.T. Mulvany, Esq., M.R.I.A., on the part of the Commissioners of Public Works’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 5, Appendix V, xxxi–lxviGoogle Scholar
Munro, R 1890. The Lake Dwellings of Europe, LondonGoogle Scholar
ó Rafertaigh, T (ed) 1985. Royal Irish Academy: a Bicentennial History 1785–1985, DublinGoogle Scholar
Reeves, W 1859. ‘An account of the crannoge of Inishrush, and its ancient occupants’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 7, 212 (misprinted 163)–217Google Scholar
Ross, M C 1961. The Arts of the Migration Period in the Walters Art Gallery, BaltimoreGoogle Scholar
Shirley, E P 1845. Some Account of the Territory or Dominion of Farney, in the Province and Earldom of Ulster, PickeringGoogle Scholar
Shirley, E P 1846. ‘On crannoges, and remains discovered in them’, Archaeol., 3, 44–9Google Scholar
Sotheby, Wilkinson and Hodge, , 1913. Catalogue of the Important Collection of Irish Stone and Bronze Personal Ornaments & c (in gold, Silver and Bronze), formed by the well-known Antiquary Robert Day…Cork, 19 May 1913, LondonGoogle Scholar
Speck, J 1981. ‘Pfaulbauten: Dichmng oder Wahrheit? Ein Querschnitt durch 125 Jahre Forschungesgeschichte’, Helvetia Archäeologic., (Archäeologie in der Schweiz), 45–48 (Zürcher Seeufersiedlungen: Von der Pfalhbau-Romantik zur modernen archäeologishen Forschung), 98138Google Scholar
Starkey, D P 1863. ‘Description of an oak pile found in the Lake of Geneva’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 8, 272–3Google Scholar
Stokes, W 1868. The Life and Labours in Art and Archaeology of George Petrie, LL.D., M.R.I.A., LondonGoogle Scholar
Talbot (de Malahide), J 1849. ‘Memoir on some ancient arms and implements found at Lagore, near Dunshaughlin, County of Meath, with a few remarks on the classification of northern antiquities’, Archaeol., 6, 101109CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trench, H B and Kinahan, G H 1864. ‘Notes on a Crannoge in Lough Nahinch’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 9, 176–9Google Scholar
Troyon, F 1859. ‘Ancient lake-dwellings of Switzerland’, Ulster J Archaeo., 7, 179–87Google Scholar
Troyon, F 1860a. ‘Details of discoveries made at the ancient lake-habitations of Switzerland’, Ulster J Archaeol., 8, 114Google Scholar
Troyon, F 1860b. Habitations Lacustres des Temps Anciens et Modernes, LausanneGoogle Scholar
Wakefield, E 1812. An Account of Ireland Statistical and Political, 2 vols, LondonGoogle Scholar
Wakeman, W F 1854. ‘Irish antiquities of the Saxon period’, in Collectanea Antiqua: Etchings of Archaeological Remains, (ed Roach Smith, C), III, 3744, pls X, XI, XII, 6 vols (1848–68), privately publishedGoogle Scholar
Wakeman, W F 18541855. ‘On extinct Irish oxen’, J Dublin Natur Hist Soc., 5, 6970Google Scholar
Wakeman, W F 1887. ‘Statement by W.F.Wakeman, Hon. Fellow’, J Roy Soc Antiq Irelan., 486–90Google Scholar
Wakeman, W F 1880. ‘On some recent discoveries of ancient crannog structures chiefly in the County Fermanagh’, J Roy Soc Antiq Irelan., 5, ser 4, 324–39Google Scholar
Wakeman, W F 1894, 1897. Catalogue. Specimens in the Collection of the Royal Irish Academy, Volume I; Crannog Finds, Iron, Wood, Pottery & c., Volume 2. Dublin, printed at the Science and Art Museum, not publishedGoogle Scholar
Warner, R B 1994. ‘On crannogs and kings (Part 1)’, Ulster J Archaeo., 57, 61–9Google Scholar
Wilde, W R 1840. ‘Animal remains and antiquities found at Dunshaughlin’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 1 (1836–41), 420–26Google Scholar
Wilde, W R 1857. A Descriptive Catalogue of the Antiquities in the Museum of the Royal Irish Academy, DublinGoogle Scholar
Wilde, W R 1858a. ‘On the ancient and modern races of oxen in Ireland’, Proc Roy Irish Acad, 7 (1857–61), 6475; Dublin Natur Hist Rev., 5, 276–87Google Scholar
Wilde, W R 1858b. ‘Account of three crannogs’, Proc Roy Irish Acad., 7, 147–53Google Scholar
Wilde, W R 1859a. ‘Letter from Mr Wilde’, Proc Roy Irish Acad., 7, 133–9Google Scholar
Wilde, W R 1859b. ‘On the unmanufactured animal remains belonging to the Academy’, Proc Roy Irish Acad., 7, 181212Google Scholar
Wilde, W R 1860. ‘Irish Crannoges and Swiss Pfahlbanten [sic]’, The Athenaeu., 15 December 1860, 1729, 831–2 (copy in Royal Irish Academy; MS, 12.1.15, fol 557)Google Scholar
Wilde, W R 1863. ‘A collection of miscellaneous donations’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 8, 289–94Google Scholar
Wilson, T G 1942. Victorian Doctor: Life of Sir William Wilde, London; reprinted EP, Wakefield 1974Google Scholar
Wood-Martin, W G 1886. The Lake Dwellings of Ireland, Dublin; reprinted Dublin University Press, Crannog Editions 1983Google Scholar
Wood-Martin, W G 1902. Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland: A Folklore Sketch, 2 vols, LondonGoogle Scholar
Worsaae, J J A 1846. ‘The Antiquities of Ireland and Denmark’, Proc Roy Irish Aca., 3, 327–44; 1–27 in separatumGoogle Scholar
Worsaae, J J A 1852. An Account of the Danes and Norwegians in England, Scotland, and Ireland, London; republished with an Introduction by D Henry as Viking Ireland: Jens Worsaae's Accounts of his Visit to Ireland: 1846–7, BalgaviesGoogle Scholar