Armagh and the Royal Centres in Early Medieval Ireland
Monuments, Cosmology, and the Past
N.B. Aitchison
Evidence suggests that the middle of the first millenium AD was a significant period in Irish history: a time of increasing political centralisation and the erosion of Iron Age belief patterns and social structures. In this persuasive thesis Aitchison proposes a date of AD500 as a cut-off point between Iron-Age and Early Medieval Ireland. His primary interest lies in this latter society with its new political organisations. He highlights monuments as a focus for study and argues that they have been been poorly defined and understood in the literature. He argues that a monument, while it is a reminder of the past, may also be invested with new ideological significance by a later society. Within this framework he investigates the way in which the Early Medieval Irish invested much older monuments with ideological meaning and uses Armagh and other royal centres as a vehicle for analysing central themes of early Irish history. The book coincides with a resurgence of archaeological interest in the sites of Armagh and the Navan Fort and includes a formidable bibliography. | |
DETAILS
65 b/w illustrations 368 pages Size: 23.4 x 15.6 10 digit ISBN: 1873448023 13 digit ISBN: 9781873448021
Binding: Hardback First published: 08/Dec/1994 Price: 90.00 USD / 45.00 GBP
Imprint: Cruithne Press Subject: Medieval History
BIC class: CTCB1
STATUS: Out of stock
Details updated on 02/09/2008
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Reviews
Will have a considerable impact on the work of historians and others interested in early Christian Ireland. HISTORY The ideas in this book are interesting and carefully argued... The multi-disciplinary approach is commendable, particularly in the interpretation of Navan Fort. Likewise the [argument for] the reinterpretation of earlier monuments by later generations for their own ends is enlightening. EARLY MEDIEVAL EUROPE Aitchison blend[s] an archaeologist's understanding of material remains with a historian's critical use of the textual evidence for early medieval Ireland to come up with a synthesis that is both plausible and impressive...a very good book. CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW Never less than stimulating. MEDIEVAL ARCHAEOLOGY
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