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National Museum of Ireland – Archaeology

Coordinates:53°20′25″N06°15′18″W / 53.34028°N 6.25500°W /53.34028; -6.25500
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

National museum in Dublin, Ireland
National Museum Ireland – Archaeology
Ard-Mhúsaem na hÉireann – Seandálaíocht
A rotunda with Corinthian colonnades, fronted with railings and plants.
Entrance to the museum
National Museum of Ireland – Archaeology is located in Central Dublin
National Museum of Ireland – Archaeology
Location of the museum in Dublin
Established29 August 1890
LocationKildare Street,Dublin, Ireland
Coordinates53°20′25″N06°15′18″W / 53.34028°N 6.25500°W /53.34028; -6.25500
TypeNational museum
Visitors505,420 (2019)[1]
CuratorMaeve Sikora, July, 2017 (Keeper)
Public transit accessSt Stephen's GreenLuas
Dublin PearseIarnród Éireann
Dublin Bus routes: 39, 39a, 46a, 145
WebsiteMuseum website
National Museum of Ireland network

TheNational Museum of Ireland – Archaeology (Irish:Ard-Mhúsaem na hÉireann – Seandálaíocht, often known as the "NMI") is a branch of theNational Museum of Ireland located onKildare Street inDublin, Ireland, that specialises in Irish and other antiquities dating from theStone Age to theLate Middle Ages.

Dublin Science and Art Museum Act 1877
Act of Parliament
Long titleAn Act to authorise the Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland to acquire from the Dublin Royal Society and others Lands for the Erection of a Science and Art Museum in Dublin, and to establish a National Library in Dublin; and for other purposes.
Citation40 & 41 Vict. c. ccxxxiv
Dates
Royal assent14 August 1877
Text of statute as originally enacted

The museum was established under the Dublin Science and Art Museum Act 1877 (40 & 41 Vict. c. ccxxxiv). Before, its collections had been divided between theRoyal Dublin Society and theNatural History Museum onMerrion Street.[2] The museum was built by the father and son architectsThomas Newenham Deane andThomas Manly Deane.[3] The rotunda at the front of the National Museum matches that of theNational Library of Ireland, which face each other across the front ofLeinster House.[4]

The NMI's collection contains artifacts fromprehistoric Ireland includingbog bodies,Iron andBronze Age objects such as axe heads, swords and shields in bronze, silver and gold, with the earliest dated to c. 7000 BC. It holds the world's most substantial collection of post-Roman era Irish medieval art (known asInsular art). In addition, it houses a substantial collection of medieval metalwork, Viking artefacts including swords and coins, and classical objects fromAncient Egypt,Cyprus and theRoman world.

History

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The impetus for creating the museum was the 1877 Dublin Science and Art Museum Act, which combined the collections of theRoyal Irish Academy (RIA) andRoyal Dublin Society (RDS). This new law was enacted because the RIA recognised it needed government funding to continue its acquisition program and because becoming a state body allowed easier collaboration with theBritish Museum andNational Museum of Scotland.[5] The project was overseen by thepalaeontologistAlexander Carte.[6][7][8]

Among other early sources for the museum’s collection were works held byTrinity College Dublin and theGeological Survey of Ireland.[9] These included such major pieces as theCross of Cong (which the RIA acquired from an Augustinian priory inCounty Mayo) and theDomnach Airgid (acquired in 1847). In the mid-nineteenth century, the museum also acquired the collections of academy members such asHenry Sirr and Petrie (who left some 1500 artifacts, including 900 from pre-history, six crosiers, and a number of bells and bell shrines).[10]

Many of these pieces had been found in the 19th century by agricultural labourers when population expansion and new machinery led to the cultivation of land that had not been touched since the Middle Ages.George Petrie of the RIA and others who were members of theRoyal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland intervened to prevent these metalwork artifacts from being melted down and repurposed as mere metal. Discovery of such objects continues to the present day; recent major discoveries include the 8th century Tully Lough Cross, found in 1986, and theClonycavan bog bodies, found in 2003.[11]

In 1908, the museum was renamed the National Museum of Science and Art, and in 1921, followingIrish independence, it was renamed the National Museum of Ireland.[5]

Building and interior

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The original museum was titled the Dublin Museum of Science and Art, and located between the Royal Dublin Society inLeinster House and theNatural History Museum inMerrion Street.[12] The museum's storage and display requirements became too large for these locations, and a new museum was built on Kildare Street. Opened on 29 August 1890, it was designed byThomas Newenham Deane and his son, Thomas Manly Deane, in the VictorianPalladian style. Thecolumns around the entrance and thedomedrotunda are made from Irishmarble and bear influence from both 18th centuryneoclassical design[3][13] and thePantheon in Rome. The stone on the exterior is mostlyLeinstergranite, with the columns formed fromsandstone excavated atMountcharles, County Donegal.[14]

Themosaic floors in the interior contain scenes from classical mythology. Although laid out in the 19th century by the Manchaster-based artist Ludwig Oppenheimer, they were covered for decades until cleaned and restored in 2011. The wooden doors were carved by either William Milligan of Dublin or Carlo Cambi ofSiena, Italy, while the fireplaces containmajolica tiles by the UK-basedBurmantofts Pottery.[15] The balcony of the central court is held by rows of thin cast-iron columns containing ornate capitals decorated with groups ofcherubs.[14]

  • Columns and domed rotunda at the entrance
    Columns and domed rotunda at the entrance
  • Stairway between the museum's two floors
    Stairway between the museum's two floors
  • View from the centre court overlooking the goldwork exhibition hall
    View from the centre court overlooking the goldwork exhibition hall
  • Treasury room
    Treasury room

Collection

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The NMI has a number of large permanent exhibits, mainly of Irish historical objects and also a few smaller exhibits on the ancient Mediterranean, including galleries on Ancient Egypt,[16] as well as "Ceramics and Glass from Ancient Cyprus".[17]

Prehistoric

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Stone age to early metallurgy

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The museum'sprehistoric Ireland exhibit contains artefacts from the earliest period of human habitation in Ireland (just after theLast Glacial Period) up to the Celtic Iron Age. The collection includes numerous stone implements created by the firsthunter-gatherer colonists from around 7000 BC, as well as tools, pottery and burial objects left by Neolithic farmers.[3] Some notable artefacts include four rareJadeiteaxeheads imported from theAlps ofNeolithic Italy, and the unique ceremonialmacehead discovered at the tomb ofKnowth.[18] The exhibit then covers the introduction of metallurgy into Ireland around 2500 BC, with earlycopper implements.

The museum has a large array of later Bronze Age period axes, daggers, swords, shields, cauldrons and cast bronze horns (the earliest known Irish musical instruments).[19] There are a few very early Iron weapons. Wooden objects include a largedugout logboat, wooden wheels and cauldrons and ancientreed fishing equipment.

Bronze age and goldwork

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The NMI's collection of Bronze Age goldwork ranges from c. 2200 to 1800 B.C and is considered one of the "largest and most important" in Western Europe.[22] The gold was recovered fromriver gravel and hammered into thin sheets used to create objects such as crescent-shaped collars (Gold lunula), bracelets and dress-fasteners.[22] Most of the goldwork is probably jewellery, but many of the objects of are of unknown (possibly ritual) function.

By the middle Bronze Age new goldwork techniques were developed; from around 1200 BC a great variety oftorcs were produced from twisting bars of gold. Items from the late Bronze Age (that is from c. 900 BC) include solid gold bracelets, dress-fasteners, large sheet gold collars,ear-spools and a necklace of hollow golden balls.[22][23]

Bog bodies (Iron age)

[edit]
Gallagh Man, 470–120 BC

The museum contains a number of well-preserved Irishbog bodies dating to theIron Age, some of which are believed to have beenritualistically sacrificed.[24][25] The archaeologistEamonn Kelly developed the theory that the bodies were tribal kings sacrificed by the community after failed in their kingship, drowned in pools of water at the boundary points of the tribal territory.[11] Some seem to exhibit evidence of the so-calledthreefold death practice of strangulation, wounding and drowning.The bog bodies in the collection areCashel Man (c. 2000 BC), believed to be the oldest fleshed bog body found in Europe,[26]Gallagh Man (470-120 BC),[27]Clonycavan Man (392 to 201 BC),Old Croghan Man (362 to 175 BC),[11] andBaronstown West Man (242 to 388 AD).

The bodies in the NMI's collection are males aged 25 to 40 years old who died in violent and perhaps ritualistic circumstances.[28] Thewithy hoop found around Gallagh Man's neck was probably used as agarrotte tostrangle him;[11] Although he may have been a criminal who was executed,[29] the willow rope strongly suggests ritual sacrifice as they often appear for this purpose in early Irish mythological stories.[30]

The bodies are shown alongside examples of the material culture of the CelticIron Age period, including metal weapons, horse trappings and wooden and leather pieces, including theRalaghan Idol, anIron Age carved wooden figure found inCounty Cavan.[31]

Early Medieval

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The museum's treasury room exhibits early medieval Christian and secular Irish metalwork dating from the late Iron Age to the late 12th century, and contains important pieces from both the La Tène andInsular periods.[32] The earlier works shows growing influences from the Anglo-Saxon art from England as well as the Germanic areas of Europe, while many of the pieces after the late 8th century show the influence ofViking art.[15][33]

Chalices, crosses, reliquaries, crucifixion plaques

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The displays in the Treasury room are arranged chronologically, beginning with pieces such as the late 7th centuryRinnegan Crucifixion Plaque, one of the earliest extant representations ofthe crucifixion in Irish art, and outside ofilluminated manuscripts a rare example of both representation and a narrative scene in early Insular art.[34]

Bell shrines are among the most numerous early medieval artifacts to survive. The best known examples in the museum's collection are St. Columba's bell and the bell and shrine of St. Patrick.[35][36]

The so-called "Golden Age" of Irish art begins with ecclesiastical metalwork produced from the 8th-century, mainly reliquaries and liturgical vessels, including the 8th centuryMoylough Belt-Shrine and the 8th or 9th centuryArdagh andDerrynaflan chalices. The impact of theViking invasion can be seen in Irish metalwork after the early 10th century, both in an expansion of the available materials such as silver andamber, and the absorption of Scandinavian techniques and styles. This period coincides with an era of church reform Church and the beginning of secular patronage for artwork.[37]

As many of these objects were lost in antiquity and only re-discovered in the 19th and 20th centuries, the museum has played a key role in dating, restoring and preserving newly found objects. Major recent finds include the Tully Lough Cross, found inCounty Roscommon in 1986,[41] and theFaddan More Psalter (c. 800 AD), discovered in a bog in July 2006 in the townland of Faddan More in north County Tipperary, which is held in an adjacent gallery to the Treasury.[42]

Brooches

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See also:Celtic brooch
TheTara Brooch, c. 710–750

The museum holds a substantial number of ornate penannularCeltic brooches. Produced as clothes fasteners for the elites of Ireland and Scotland, they were usually worn singly at the shoulder by men and on the breast by women.[43][44] Brooches are the most significant objects in high-quality secular metalwork from Early Medieval Insular art, and were later worn by the emerging middle-classes, more often by men than women. The most elaborate examples were clearly significant expressions of status at the top of society, and also worn by clergy,[45] probably to fastencopes and othervestments rather than as everyday wear.[46]

TheVikings began to raid Ireland from 795, with catastrophic effect for themonasteries in particular. However, although the Vikings established severallongphorts, initially fortified encampments for overwintering, and later towns likeDublin,Wexford,Cork andWaterford, the native Irish were more successful than the English and Scots in preventing large-scale Viking takeovers of areas for settlement by farmers.[47] The period is characterised by a greatly increased availability of silver, presumably the result of Viking raiding and trading, and most brooches are made from silver throughout, as gilding and decoration in other materials nearly disappears. The brooches are often large, but plainer than the most elaborate earlier ones. This continues a trend that can be detected in later brooches from the preceding period, before much Viking influence can have made itself felt.

The early 8th centuryTara Brooch is the widely considered the most complex and ornate of the surviving medieval examples and has been described as the "most outstanding item of secular metalwork of the early medieval period."[48] It has been exhibited internationally and was one of the artifacts that fuelled the Celtic Revival in the mid-19th century.[49] The 9th centuryRoscrea Brooch is one of a number of transitional brooches.[50] Later Irish brooches Scandinavian stylistic and technical influence, notably an example found onRathlin Island.[51]

House-shaped shrines

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Main article:House-shaped shrine

House (or tomb) shaped shrines originate from the European continent, Ireland and Scotland and mostly date from the 8th or 9th centuries, and like many Insular shrines, they were heavily reworked and embellished in the centuries following their initial construction, often with metal adornments or figures influenced byRomanesque sculpture. Typical examples consist of a wooden core covered with silver and copperalloy plates. They were built to hold relics of saints or martyrs from the early Church era;[54] a number held corporeal remains when found in the modern period, presumably they were parts of the saint's body. Others, including the now badly damagedBreac Maodhóg, held manuscripts associated with the commemorated saint.[55][56]

The Breac Maodhóg was probably used as a battle standard when it would have been carried onto the battlefield by a cleric to offer protection to the troops and perhaps bring victory. A medieval text on the patron saints of thekings of Leinster records that the kings of Breifne sought that "the famous wonder-working Breac [was] carried thrice around them" during battle.[57]

  • The Lough Erne Shrine, 11th century. The smaller but similar shrine was found inside the larger container.[58]
    The Lough Erne Shrine, 11th century. The smaller but similar shrine was found inside the larger container.[58]
  • Drawing of a shrine found in the River Shannon, c. 9th century
    Drawing of a shrine found in theRiver Shannon, c. 9th century
  • Gable of the badly damaged but important Breac Maodhóg, showing the figure of a harpist. Late 11th century[59]
    Gable of the badly damaged but importantBreac Maodhóg, showing the figure of a harpist. Late 11th century[59]
  • Saint Manchan's Shrine, 12th century

Cumdachs

[edit]
Main article:Cumdach

Cumdachs (or book shrines) are elaborate ornamented metal reliquary boxes or cases used to holdEarly Medieval Irish manuscripts orrelics. They are typically later than the books they contain, often by several centuries.[60] In most surviving examples the book comes from the peak age of Irish monasticism before 800, and the extant cumdachs date from after 1000, although it is clear the form dates from considerably earlier.[61] The usual form is a design based on a cross on the main face, with use of large gems ofrock crystal or othersemi-precious stones, leaving the spaces between the arms of the cross for more varied decoration. Several were carried on a metal chain or leather cord, often worn off the belt, or suspended around the neck, placing them next to the heart and thus offering spiritual and perhaps medical benefits. They were also used to bring healing to the sick or dying, or more formally, as witness contracts. Many had hereditary laykeepers from among the chiefly families who had formed links with monasteries.[62]

Although most of the extant book-shaped protective shrines are mentioned inIrish annals, they were not properly described until the early 19th century, when antiquarians and collectors such as Petrie began to seek them out from heredity collections. Most are badly damaged, including due to general wear and tear over the centuries, fires at their holding location, or more usually, having elements such as their gemstones removed for sale by their owners. A majority are now in the NMI.[63]

Croziers

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Main article:Insular crozier
Drop-plate of theRiver Laune Crozier, late 11th century
Drop-plate of theClonmacnoise Crozier

The NMI holds the vast majority of extantInsular croziers. There are types of processionalbishop's staff (crozier) produced in Ireland and Scotland betweenc. 800 and 1200. They can be distinguished from mainland European types by their curved crooks and drop (the hollow box-like extension at the end of the crook).[66][67] Symbols of office for bishops or abbots, their form is based on the idea of the clerics asshepherds for their flocks. Although their production ended c. 1200, they continued in use and were often refurbished and added to until the late medieval period.[68] After the dissolution of the monasteries in the 12th and 13th centuries, the croziers were in danger of plunder from both Viking and Norman invaders. As large objects, they were difficult to hide, a reason why so many surviving examples show evidence of having been broken in two; reducing their length made them easier to hide in small spaces. A majority of the surviving extant croziers or fragments were held over the centuries by hereditary keepers (usually generations of a local family) until they were re-discovered byantiquarians in the early 19th century.[69][70][71]

The croziers are often ornamented withinterlace designs, geometric patterns andzoomorphic (portraying humans as non-human animals) figures. The animal designs in the earliest example, including the 9th centuryProsperous Crozier, are depicted in a naturalistic manner, while many of the later examples, such as the c. 1100Lismore Crozier, bear influence from both the Ringerike and lUrnes styles of Viking art.[72][73] Some of the Ringerike style animals bear close resemblance to figures on the margins of ninth-century Celtic brooches.[74] In craftmanship and ornamentation, the late 11th centuryClonmacnoise Crozier is considered the finest of the fully intact example, followed in quality by the 11th centuryRiver Laune and Lismore Crozier.

Late Medieval

[edit]

Over the course of the 12th century, the Viking port cities of Dublin,Waterford andCork developed extensive trade links with Britain and the continent. This led to greater exposure to international styles and inevitably began the end of the Insular period of Irish art.[75] The earlier style largely came to an end after the mid-12th century Church reform movement, theNorman invasion of 1169–1170 and the subsequent wide adoption of Romanesque art. According to Kelly, by the late Middle Ages, "much of the material on display [in the museum] illustrates lifestyles, trades and activities that were common to much of medieval Europe".[76] This, through the Gothic and Renaissance periods Irish art was essentially a regional variation of wider European styles.[77]

The English colonisation of Ireland resulted in the island having two separate identities through the last Middle Ages, each with their own language, laws and cultures, a fact that can be discerned from contemporary objects in the museum's collection.[76] The museum defines the late period as extending from c. 1150 to c. 1550, but allows for a lot of cross-over with the earlier "golden age" of Irish art (including some of the later croziers, bell-shrines and cumdachs).[78]

The museum displays its collection of later work under three groupings: "bellatores (those who fight), oratores (those who pray) and laboratores (those who work)".[79]

  • Copper-alloy crucifix figurine, County Wicklow, 12th century
    Copper-alloy crucifix figurine,County Wicklow, 12th century
  • Crucifix in gilded copper-alloy, c. 1470
    Crucifix in gilded copper-alloy, c. 1470
  • Remains of a bascinet made of iron, 14th–15th century. Found in Clashnamuck, County Laois.
    Remains of abascinet made of iron, 14th–15th century. Found in Clashnamuck,County Laois.
  • Gilded silver cross pendant, c. 1500
    Gilded silver cross pendant, c. 1500
  • Silver cross pendant with glass and garnets, c. 1500. Found near Callan, County Kilkenny
    Silver cross pendant with glass and garnets, c. 1500. Found nearCallan, County Kilkenny
  • Pendant with crucifix, gilded silver, c. 1500, County Waterford
    Pendant with crucifix, gilded silver, c. 1500,County Waterford

Governance

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The museum's stated function is to hold the nation's "archaeological, ethnographical, classical and Egyptian collections. The Division is also responsible for the administration of various statutory functions such as the acquisition of archaeological objects claimed as the property of the State and the regulation of licences to export and alter archaeological objects".[80] Its day-to-day work is preoccupied with recording and cataloging newly found artefacts, which in 2019 mostly involved bog finds,lithics andceramics.[80]

References

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Notes

[edit]
  1. ^"Visitor figures for the National Cultural Institutions".Gov.ie, 3 November 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2023
  2. ^"1877-1899: The Science and Art Museum, Dublin". NMI. Retrieved 15 August 2021
  3. ^abcKelly (2007), p. 4
  4. ^Dublin Tourism, p. 18.
  5. ^ab"History of the Organisation". National Museum of Ireland. Retrieved 7 January 2022
  6. ^"Deane, Thomas Newenham, Sir".Dictionary of Irish Architects. Retrieved 8 January 2022
  7. ^"History of the Library: 1877 to 1926".National Library of Ireland. Retrieved 8 January 2022
  8. ^"The National Museum of Science and Art". Library Ireland. Retrieved 9 January 2022
  9. ^Rudolph (2019), "National Museum of Ireland, Dublin"
  10. ^Overbe (2012), p. 22
  11. ^abcd"Kingship and Sacrifice". National Museum of Ireland, 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2021
  12. ^Buckley, Dan. "National Museum of Ireland: 19th-century vision with 21st-century purpose".Irish Examiner, 29 August 2015. Retrieved 9 January 2022
  13. ^Ó Floinn; Wallace (2002), p. 14
  14. ^abKelly (2007), p. 5
  15. ^abKelly (2011), p. 109
  16. ^Ancient Egypt, NMI
  17. ^Ceramics and Glass from Ancient Cyprus". National Museum of Ireland. Retrieved 31 May 2021
  18. ^Flint Mace-Head. NMI. Retrieved 7 January 2022
  19. ^Kelly (2007), pp. 10–13
  20. ^"Prehistoric Stone Implements from the River Bann and Lough Neagh".Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy: Archaeology, Culture, History, Literature, volume 30 (1912/1913), pp. 195–222
  21. ^O'Toole, Fintan.The Irish Times, 25 June 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2022
  22. ^abcKelly (2007), p. 15
  23. ^"A Late Bronze Age gold necklace from Tumna, Co. Roscommon". Irish Archaeology. Retrieved 8 January 2022
  24. ^Kelly (2007), pp. 78-79
  25. ^"Bog Bodies of the Iron Age: Gallagh Man".PBS. Retrieved 14 May 2021
  26. ^Kelly, Eamonn. "The bog body from Cashel Bog, Co. Laois".Ossory, Laois and Leinster, volume 5, 2012
  27. ^Croffey, Amy. "Ancient bog body found in Meath".TheJournal.ie, 10 December 2020. Retrieved 30 May 2021
  28. ^Bentley (2015), p. 36
  29. ^Haughton (2019), p. 108
  30. ^Kelly (Scéal na Móna, 2006), p. 58
  31. ^Rynne (1972), pp. 3, 84
  32. ^Kelly (2007), p. 21
  33. ^Kelly (2011), p. 110
  34. ^O'Toole (2013)
  35. ^Mullarkey, Paul. "Colmcille 1500 Lecture Series: The many phases of the shrine of the Cathach". National Museum of Ireland, 10 November 2021. Retrieved 9 January 2022
  36. ^Mahr (1939), p. 63
  37. ^Kelly (2011), p. 111
  38. ^Kelly (2003), pp. 9–10
  39. ^"Derrynaflan Chalice". National Museum of Ireland . Retrieved 24 November 2021
  40. ^Moss (2014), p. 291
  41. ^Kelly, Eamonn. "The Tully Lough cross".Archaeology Ireland, volume 17, no. 2, issue 64, 2003
  42. ^"The Treasury". National Museum of Ireland. Retrieved 26 June 2021
  43. ^Youngs (1989), p. 89
  44. ^O'Floinn, pp. 172–173
  45. ^Youngs (1989), p. 72
  46. ^Laing (1975), p. 304
  47. ^Ship, Doherty, 34–35
  48. ^Kelly (2007), p. 24
  49. ^Fowle, Frances. "The Celtic Revival in Britain and Ireland: Reconstructing the past". In: Farley, Julia; Hunter, Fraser (eds),Celts: Art and Identity. London:British Museum, 2015, pp. 234–259
  50. ^NMI, 215–216
  51. ^Ship; O'Floinn, p. 90
  52. ^Youngs (1989), p. 41
  53. ^Ó Floinn; Wallace (2002), p. 185
  54. ^Ó Floinn (1990), p. 49
  55. ^Murray (2005), p. 136
  56. ^Moss (2014), pp. 286-293
  57. ^Lucas (1986), p. 19
  58. ^Moss (2014), p. 288
  59. ^O'Toole (2013), p. 86
  60. ^Warner (1906), xliv
  61. ^Moss (2014), p. 294
  62. ^Ó Floinn; Wallace (2002), p. 262
  63. ^Crawford (1923), p. 75
  64. ^Petrie, George. "Exhibition of the Missagh, or Miosach".Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy (1836–1869), volume 5, 1850–1853. p. 464.JSTOR 20489800
  65. ^Moss (2014), pp. 48, 67, 113
  66. ^Youngs (1989), p. 214
  67. ^Murray (2007a), p. 81
  68. ^Moss (2014), p. 83
  69. ^Murray (2008), pp. 114–116
  70. ^Murray (2007b), p. 146
  71. ^Mitchell (1996), p. 6
  72. ^Bourke (1985), p. 151
  73. ^Ó Floinn; Wallace (2002), p. 220
  74. ^Bourke (1985), p. 153
  75. ^Ó Floinn; Wallace (2002), p. 257
  76. ^abKelly (2007), p. 37
  77. ^Stalley (1977), pp. 192–193
  78. ^"Medieval Ireland 1150-1550". National Museum of Ireland. Retrieved 30 January 2022
  79. ^Kelly (2007), p. 38
  80. ^ab"National Museum of Ireland annual financial reports and other corporate information, 2019". National Museum of Ireland, 2020. Retrieved 31 January 2022

Sources

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External links

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