On present evidence the human settlement of Ireland commenced some ten thousand years ago and the prehistoric story thus covers over eight and a half thousand years. This book provides a chronological account of this long timespan and, with numerous illustrations, charts the development of the first hunting and foraging communities, the achievements of the earliest agriculturalists with their remarkable megalithic tombs, and the technological advances of the later bronze and iron-using societies.
Recent decades have seen some exceptional developments in the study of the prehistoric archaeology of Ireland. New discoveries, excavations and research, new theoretical approaches and the increasing application of radiocarbon and tree-ring dating techniques have all made an enormous contribution to the better understanding of this remote past. As well as being a comprehensive and original review of the subject, this book answers the need for a detailed introduction to a large body of archaeological evidence and it is a measure of the amount of recent work that almost half the references cited in the bibliography have been published in the last dozen years or so.
Author(s): John Waddell
Edition: 1
Publisher: Galway University Press
Year: 1998
Language: English
Pages: XII+434
Preface vi
Acknowledgements vii
List of illustrations ix
Introduction 1
Chapter 1. Postglacial Ireland: the first colonists 8
Chapter 2. Farmers of the fourth millennium 25
Chapter 3. The cult of the dead 57
Chapter 4. Sacred circles and new technology 107
Chapter 5. Enigmatic monuments 167
Chapter 6. Bronze and gold and power: 1500-900 BC 179
Chapter 7. The consolidation of wealth and status: 900-500 BC 225
Chapter 8. From bronze to iron 279
Chapter 9. Elusive settlements and ritual sites 319
Chapter 10. Protohistory 373
Bibliography 378
Index 409