Description
In this issue:
– THE KILKENNY WORKHOUSE BURIALS: An archaeology of the Irish Potato Famine
– TAMING THE LAKE DISTRICT: Cairns, fields, and cultivation
– THE BEAU STREET HOARD, BATH: An unusual Roman cache from an unusual Roman town
– DISCOVERING AYLESBURY’S HILLFORT: Defensive ditches and ritual Iron Age burials
Plus: News, Reviews, Comment, Sherds, Odd Socs, and more!
From the Editor:
The Irish Potato Famine, or Great Hunger, took a terrible toll. Between the million who died and the million more who emigrated to escape, it cost Ireland a quarter of its population. Now, excavations at the former Kilkenny Workhouse have unexpectedly unearthed a cluster of long-forgotten mass graves holding famine victims. Providing a rare opportunity to balance historical accounts against the physical remains of a community devastated by the famine, it reveals how a tragic misdiagnosis compounded the suffering.
Tumbled walls are a staple of a countryside ramble, but just how old are they? Recent research has suggested that many of the Lake District’s fallen walls were built far earlier than anyone suspected. They are providing a new insight into how the uplands were tamed.
A scatter of loose Roman coins at a redevelopment site in Bath led to the discovery of a massive Roman hoard. Containing 17,500 coins, x-raying the cache proved it comprised of multiple money bags laid down over a period of 30 or more years. We investigate what this means for our understanding of Roman hoarding.
Peering into a services trench in Aylesbury provided the first glimpse of a previously unknown hillfort. Later excavations revealed a remarkable group of Iron Age burials including both humans and animals.
Free inside this issue, for those of you who live in the UK, is our annual Digs Guide. The indispensable guide to this summer’s excavations, it is crammed with opportunities to get involved with teasing out the past. For those of you enjoying the magazine further afield an electronic version of the guide can be downloaded from here.
Finally, a very big thank you to everyone who came to the 2013 Current Archaeology conference. You can find out what we have been up to in the magazine, and read a few words from our award winners. Congratulations to them all!
Cover Date: May-2013, Volume 24 Issue 2
