Hillfort, Commons Of Lloyd, Kells, Co. Meath
The hillfort at Commons of Lloyd occupies a commanding position on a prominent hill about 1.5 kilometres west-northwest of the famous monastery at Kells, County Meath.
Hillfort, Commons Of Lloyd, Kells, Co. Meath
From its elevated position, the site overlooks a west to east stretch of the River Blackwater roughly 700 metres to the north. Whilst an inland lighthouse built in 1791 now dominates the hilltop, along with some later landscape features, archaeological investigation has revealed that this location has been significant for millennia.
In 2013, the Discovery Programme conducted geophysical surveys as part of their ‘Late Iron Age and “Roman” Ireland’ project, which revealed the complex defensive architecture hidden beneath the surface. The survey identified a summit enclosure approximately 120 metres in diameter, defined by two ditches with accompanying inner banks and what appears to be a burnt palisade trench. An entrance gap through these features faces east. Beyond this central fortification, at a distance of 70 to 80 metres, lies an outer enclosure measuring about 250 metres across, created by at least two earlier fosse features that are now partially obscured by later earthworks. Between these two defensive circuits, archaeologists detected several uncertain ring ditches, including one interrupted fosse feature about 22 metres in diameter, positioned east of the summit enclosure’s entrance.
Test excavations conducted in 2003 uncovered what may be a pit or ditch associated with the summit enclosure. Radiocarbon dating of burnt animal bone from this feature provided a date range of 1130 to 910 BC, placing the site’s occupation firmly in the Late Bronze Age. This dating evidence, combined with the sophisticated defensive layout revealed by geophysical survey, demonstrates that the Commons of Lloyd hillfort was an important fortified settlement during a period of significant social and technological change in prehistoric Ireland.
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Newman, C. 1997 Tara: an archaeological survey. Discovery Programme Monographs 2. Dublin. Royal Irish Academy.
Carr, W. 2000 Loyd, townland and commons. In L. McNiffe (ed.) Studies in Local History: Meath, 99-110. Navan.
Neary, P. H. 2004 Report on Excavation and Monitoring at Commons of Lloyd, Kells, Co. Meath. Licence: 03E1778. Unpublished report, Author.
Dowling, G.2015b Exploring the Hidden Depths of Tara’s Hinterland: Geophysical Survey and Landscape Investigations in the Meath – North Dublin Region, eastern Ireland. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, Available on CJO 2015 doi: 10.1017/ppr.2015.11