Irish Bridge Sheds Light on Dark Ages
by Sean Duke a science writer in Dublin
The vaunted engineering skills
that the Romans spread across Europe are
supposed to have vanished during the "Dark Ages"
- from the collapse of the Roman empire in the
fifth century until about A.D. 1000. But a new
find in the west of Ireland is challenging that
assumption. A pair of underwater archaeologists
has discovered the remains of a huge wooden
bridge across the river Shannon. At 160-meters
long, it my be the largest wooden structure from
the early medieval period ever found in Europe,
and its technical complexity has surprised
archaeologists. Researchers now believe that the
bridge, dated at A.D. 804, was the work of monks
from the nearby town of
Clonmacnoise,
who kept Roman expertise over the centuries.

"The
Clonmacnoise bridge fills an important gap,"
says archaeologist John Bradley of the National
University in Maynooth. "There was no evidence,
of large bridges in Europe between the Roman era
and about A.D. 1000." It is unlikely to be the
last such discovery, adds Morgens Schou
Jorgensen of the National Museum of Denmark, an
expert on the large wooden bridges built by the
Vikings several centuries later. "I think that
other similar bridges will now be found in
Ireland, as happened in Denmark after the first
Viking long bridge was uncovered in 1932," says
Jorgensen. If so, the finding could mean that a
sophisticated land communications network may
have been in place across Ireland in the 9th
century.
Donal Boland and Mattie
Graham, divers who specialize in underwater
archaeology, had begun their survey of the river
Shannon after coming across an intriguing
reference to abridge in the Annals of
Clonmacnoise,
written in 1158. They concentrated on a
500-meter stretch of the river near the remains
of the monastery. In 1994, with archaeological
guidance from Fionnbarr Moore of the National
Monuments Service of Ireland, they found what
they were looking for: an ancient oak post
sticking out of the muddy riverbed. By last
fall, Boland and Graham had discovered a total
of 130 timbers, all nearly arranged in pairs 5
meters apart, spanning the entire 160-meter
width of the Shannon. They also found nine oak
dugout canoes, from which workers may have
driven the pilings deep into the riverbed, and
the remains of an elaborate horizontal
cross-bracing system that once supported a
roadway.
The line of the posts ran
directly into the ruins of a13th century Norman
castle, leading the researchers to suspect at
first that the bridge was also a Norman
construction. But this theory was ruled out
after they sent samples of the oak timbers to
Queen's University Belfast for dating by
tree-ring analysis. The Belfast researchers, led
by Mike Bailie, said the timbers were felled in
804, a full 365 years before Norman invaders
arrived from France.
The focus of archaeologists
then turned to the thriving 9th century monastic
settlement at
Clonmacnoise. The town of several thousand
inhabitants straddled the point where an
east-west route across Ireland known as the
Eiscir Riada or Esker Read, crossed the Shannon.
"The bridge was built to attract commerce" says
Aidan O'Sullian the archaeological director in
charge of
Clonmacnoise, "and the leadership for the
project was probably provided by the monks."
The discovery of the
Clonmacnoise
bridge has led archaeologists said, as Bradley
to question whether knowledge was really lost in
the aftermath of the fall of Rome, at least in
distant parts of Europe that were spared the
chaos of the Dark Ages. "We know the Irish
preserved Roman texts, and this find suggests
that they may also have preserved Roman
technology and bridge building skills," says
Bradley. "Perhaps the Dark Ages were not so dark
after all."
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