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From CODECS: Online Database and e-Resources for Celtic Studies


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Soderberg, John, “Wild cattle: red deer in the religious texts, iconography, and archaeology of early medieval Ireland”, International Journal of Historical Archaeology 8:3 (September, 2004): 167–183.
abstract:
Humans use animals as a means of creating and manipulating relationships with other human beings. This process occurs both through the use of animals for food or raw materials and through the use of animals as literary and artistic symbols. Cervus elaphus is Ireland’s only indigenous deer species. It is also unique in being the only native Irish, wild animal to appear frequently in medieval texts, iconography, and archaeological deposits. This paper brings together diverse sources of information to illuminate how early medieval monasteries used red deer to establish an identity for themselves and to conceptualize socioeconomic relationships with others.
Boyle, James W., “Lest the lowliest be forgotten: locating the impoverished in early medieval Ireland”, International Journal of Historical Archaeology 8:2 (June, 2004): 85–99.
abstract:
In early medieval Ireland (ca. a.d. 400–850), every person's rank in society was codified in documents and visibly apparent by their material possessions. Early Irish literature is overwhelmingly concerned with the negotiation of status, but it is focused primarily on the rights and responsibilities of the nobility and wealthy farmers. Those of lower status are often ignored, and it has been difficult as archaeologists to agree on what constitutes a lower class site or artifactual assemblage. This paper addresses these arguments and challenges the belief that the lowest members of medieval Irish society are invisible to archaeology due to their impoverished existence.

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