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Belfast,
Belfast
Ballynahatty Road
Belfast BT8 8LE
United Kingdom
Friday 14th June 2024, European Archaeology Day Tour with Barrie Hartwell at The Giant’s Ring
Giant's RingBallynahatty Road
Belfast BT8 8LE
United Kingdom
European Archaeology Day Tour with Barrie Hartwell at The Giant’s Ring, Friday, 14 June 2024 at 12:30 (BST)
Guided tour
European Archaeology Day Tour with Barrie Hartwell at The Giant’s Ring
Just six miles from the centre of Belfast, at Ballynahatty in County Down, is one of Ireland’s great Neolithic henge monuments: the 200m-wide Giant’s Ring. For well over a thousand years, this plateau above the River Lagan was the focus of intense funerary ritual including a great timber enclosure, 90m long, with an elaborate entrance and inner temple - a public building in the grand style, elegantly designed to control space, views, and access to an inner sanctum containing a platform for exposure of the dead. By 2550 BC the timber temple had been swept away in a massive conflagration replaced by one of the last great public ceremonial enterprises known to have been constructed by the Neolithic people of the north of Ireland – the Giant’s Ring. It has survived for 4,500 years, an enduring symbol of the ancestral heartland of the Neolithic farmers of the Lagan Valley and their enigmatic religion.
Barrie Hartwell is Honorary Curator and formerly Senior Research Officer in Archaeology at Queen’s University Belfast. He excavated the timber enclosure over 10 seasons during the 1990s and is author of ' Ballynahatty: Excavations in a Neolithic Monumental Landscape ‘
PLEASE NOTE: Whilst a car park is located adjacent to the site, provision is limited If the car park is full upon arrival, large car parking areas are located within a short distance at Belvoir Forest car park beside the hotel and Shaws Bridge and Minnowburn. Please stay safe and take care when accessing and egressing the site.
There are no toilet facilities, and participants should wear appropriate clothing and footwear for outdoors, and to suit the weather.
This event is free of charge, booking is essential at Eventbrite https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/european-archaeology-day-tour-with-barrie-hartwell-at-the-giants-ring-tickets-911310523307
Organised by Historic Environment Record of Northern Ireland
Barrie Hartwell is Honorary Curator and formerly Senior Research Officer in Archaeology at Queen’s University Belfast. He excavated the timber enclosure over 10 seasons during the 1990s and is author of ' Ballynahatty: Excavations in a Neolithic Monumental Landscape ‘
PLEASE NOTE: Whilst a car park is located adjacent to the site, provision is limited If the car park is full upon arrival, large car parking areas are located within a short distance at Belvoir Forest car park beside the hotel and Shaws Bridge and Minnowburn. Please stay safe and take care when accessing and egressing the site.
There are no toilet facilities, and participants should wear appropriate clothing and footwear for outdoors, and to suit the weather.
This event is free of charge, booking is essential at Eventbrite https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/european-archaeology-day-tour-with-barrie-hartwell-at-the-giants-ring-tickets-911310523307
Organised by Historic Environment Record of Northern Ireland
Fee required
, There are discounted rates Friday 14 June de 12:30 à 14:30General public
Mid Ulster,
Bellaghy Bawn
Excavations of a Neolithic Tomb at Tirnony, Maghera, Co. Derry/Londonderry by Dr Cormac McSparron
Castle Street, Bellaghy, County Londonderry, BT45 8LAThis lecture is part of European Archaeology Days (EAD) 2024 Lecture Series at Bellaghy Bawn
Lecture
Excavations of a Neolithic Tomb at Tirnony, Maghera, Co. Derry/Londonderry
In the harsh winter of 2010, a combination of root action, and a hard frost, cracked one of the stone supporting the structure of Tirnony Dolmen causing the capstone to collapse into the interior of the tomb. In advance of the repair and reconstruction of the tomb, an excavation was carried out by Queen’s in collaboration with HED (then NIEA) to record the deposits around and inside the tomb which risked being damaged during the restoration. The excavation revealed a complex monument with evidence for human burial and ritual in the Neolithic period. Artefacts discovered during the excavation included fragments of pottery vessels of Neolithic date and flint knives and scrapers. Radiocarbon dates revealed that the monument was constructed about 3900BC.
Dr Cormac McSparron directed the excavations at Tirnony Dolmen. He was from 2002 to 2023 a Research Fellow in Archaeology at Queen’s University Belfast, and is now working with the Historic Environment Division
PLEASE NOTE: Limited parking is available at Bellaghy Bawn
This is a free event but booking is essential at Eventbrite
Dr Cormac McSparron directed the excavations at Tirnony Dolmen. He was from 2002 to 2023 a Research Fellow in Archaeology at Queen’s University Belfast, and is now working with the Historic Environment Division
PLEASE NOTE: Limited parking is available at Bellaghy Bawn
This is a free event but booking is essential at Eventbrite
Free
Saturday 15 June de 14:45 à 15:45Adults, General public
Mid Ulster,
Bellaghy Bawn
More than Meets the Eye: Evidence for Late Medieval Churches in Ulster, lecture by Louise Moffett
Castle Street, Bellaghy, County Londonderry, BT45 8LAThis lecture is part of European Archaeology Days (EAD) 2024 Lecture Series at Bellaghy Bawn
Lecture
More than Meets the Eye: Evidence for Late Medieval Churches in Ulster
The local church was a central component of life in late medieval Ireland. With over 400 late medieval church sites, Ulster has a wealth of material to explore, combining archaeological and documentary evidence. From the ruined walls of stone lying in old graveyards or field corners, to the Latin texts written centuries ago, there is a corpus of underappreciated evidence surrounding these once-central places of worship, places that served not only as spiritual hubs but community centres. Examining the different forms of evidence enables the building of a multi-layered picture; we can discover the individuality of each church site through its setting, its building, what the documents reveal occurred there, whilst also developing a broader understanding of the parochial church and thus life in late medieval Ireland.
Louise Moffett is a PhD Researcher in Archaeology at Queen’s University Belfast. Her research explores the place of the late medieval parish church in the north of Ireland in the physical, socio-political and economic landscapes.
PLEASE NOTE: Limited parking is available at Bellaghy Bawn
This event is free but booking at Eventbrite is essential
Louise Moffett is a PhD Researcher in Archaeology at Queen’s University Belfast. Her research explores the place of the late medieval parish church in the north of Ireland in the physical, socio-political and economic landscapes.
PLEASE NOTE: Limited parking is available at Bellaghy Bawn
This event is free but booking at Eventbrite is essential
Free
Saturday 15 June de 13:30 à 14:30Adults, General public
Mid Ulster,
Bellaghy Bawn
European Archaeology Days (EAD) 2024 Lecture Series at Bellaghy Bawn: Church Island by Thomas McErlean
Castle Street, Bellaghy, County Londonderry, BT45 8LAEuropean Archaeology Days (EAD) 2024 Lecture Series at
Bellaghy Bawn
Lecture
Church Island Lecture by Thomas McErlean
Church Island in Lough Beg is one of the most iconic heritage sites in Mid Ulster. It has fifth century Patrician traditions but by possibly as early as the six century became a Island monastic site associated with Saint Teady (latinised Thaddeus). In the 12th century it was transformed into the parochial church for Ballyscullion and its lands passed under the control of the Erenagh O’ Scullion family. Most of the parish was composed of the estate of the Mulholland family who held the prestigious role as keepers of St Patrick’s Bell. Very substantial ruins of the medieval parish survive surrounded by it’s ancient graveyard. An important focus of interest is a venerated stone with a hollow ( a bullaun) and associated rag tree which are still objects of religious veneration. In late 18th century the celebrated Bishop of Derry, the Earl of Bristol embellished the church with a very fine stone spire. An annual pilgrimage to the island is still held around the seventh of September , the feast day of St Thaddeus. The lecture will outline the long and sometime dramatic history of this very special place in the landscape.
Thomas McErlean a landscape archaeologist and a native of the Portglenone area. He is a widely published author on many aspects of heritage and has had a varied archaeological career culminating in many years spent in the University of Ulster as a senior research fellow. He has worked mainly in Ireland but has been involved in archaeological projects as far away as East Africa and Tasmania. One of his abiding research interests is the study of the Gaelic landscape with particular reference to the origin and significance of Irish parishes and townlands. He has researched and published work on Irish monastic sites of the Early Medieval period hence his abiding interest in Church Island.
PLEASE NOTE: Limited parking is available at Bellaghy Bawn
This is a free event but booking is essential at Eventbrite
Thomas McErlean a landscape archaeologist and a native of the Portglenone area. He is a widely published author on many aspects of heritage and has had a varied archaeological career culminating in many years spent in the University of Ulster as a senior research fellow. He has worked mainly in Ireland but has been involved in archaeological projects as far away as East Africa and Tasmania. One of his abiding research interests is the study of the Gaelic landscape with particular reference to the origin and significance of Irish parishes and townlands. He has researched and published work on Irish monastic sites of the Early Medieval period hence his abiding interest in Church Island.
PLEASE NOTE: Limited parking is available at Bellaghy Bawn
This is a free event but booking is essential at Eventbrite
Free
Saturday 15 June de 11:30 à 12:30Adults, General public