Bibliography

Susan
Lyons

2 publications between 2015 and 2016 indexed
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Contributions to journals

Lyons, Susan, “Food plants, fruits and foreign foodstuffs: the archaeological evidence from urban medieval Ireland”, Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy 115 C (2015): 111–166.  
abstract:
The historical record is largely used to qualify the consumption of cultivated crops, and other food plants, such as fruits, vegetables, herbs and imported goods in the medieval Irish diet. Despite our rich literary sources, evidence for horticulture as well as the use of collected and exotic foodstuffs in medieval Ireland is still under-represented, and the remains of such plants rarely survive to make any inferences on the subject. The increase in archaeobotanical research in Ireland is producing a valuable archaeological dataset to help assess the nature, composition and variation of food plants in the medieval diet. Botanical remains preserved in anoxic deposits provide a unique snapshot of the diversity of plants consumed at a site, including information on processing techniques, storage and seasonality. With particular reference to urban medieval sites dating from the tenth to the fifteenth centuries, this paper will present and appraise the archaeological evidence for the use and consumption of cultivated, wild and imported foodstuffs, and the areas of research that still need to be addressed.
abstract:
The historical record is largely used to qualify the consumption of cultivated crops, and other food plants, such as fruits, vegetables, herbs and imported goods in the medieval Irish diet. Despite our rich literary sources, evidence for horticulture as well as the use of collected and exotic foodstuffs in medieval Ireland is still under-represented, and the remains of such plants rarely survive to make any inferences on the subject. The increase in archaeobotanical research in Ireland is producing a valuable archaeological dataset to help assess the nature, composition and variation of food plants in the medieval diet. Botanical remains preserved in anoxic deposits provide a unique snapshot of the diversity of plants consumed at a site, including information on processing techniques, storage and seasonality. With particular reference to urban medieval sites dating from the tenth to the fifteenth centuries, this paper will present and appraise the archaeological evidence for the use and consumption of cultivated, wild and imported foodstuffs, and the areas of research that still need to be addressed.

Contributions to edited collections or authored works

Reilly, Eileen, Susan Lyons, Ellen OʼCarroll, Lorna OʼDonnell, Ingelise Stuijts, and Adrienne Corless, “Building the towns: the interrelationship between woodland history and urban life in Viking Age Ireland”, in: Ben Jervis, Lee G. Broderick, and Idoia Grau-Sologestoa (eds), Objects, environment, and everyday life in medieval Europe, Turnhout: Brepols, 2016. 67–92.