H 203 x W 276 mm
420 pages
274 figures, 16 tables (colour throughout)
Published Sep 2024
ISBN
Hardback: 9781803277691
Digital: 9781803277707
Keywords
Irish Civil War; Contemporary Archaeology; Guerrilla Tactics; 1922
Related titles
By Marion Dowd, Robert Mulraney, James Bonsall
Combining archaeology, local and military histories, community recollections, and landscape studies, this groundbreaking study, the first excavation of a Civil War site in Ireland, facilitates a wider discussion of the role of dugouts in guerrilla warfare and offers a unique view on the Irish revolutionary period at a regional and national scale.
Foreword – Michael MacDonagh
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
Glossary
Abbreviations
Note on terminology
Timeline of principal events
Introduction
Chapter 1: A Civil War dugout: archaeology, history, memory
Chapter 2: Landscape setting of Tormore Cave
History
Chapter 3: Sligo in 1921-1923 and the historical context of the ‘Glencar hideout’
Chapter 4: Dugouts: an essential component of guerrilla warfare
Archaeology
Chapter 5: Civil War modifications, built structures and features in Tormore Cave
Chapter 6: Things left behind: artefacts found in Tormore Cave
Chapter 7: Day to day life in the Tormore Cave dugout
People & Memory
Chapter 8: General Officer Commanding Billy Pilkington
Chapter 9: The men on the hills: the IRA billeted in Tormore Cave
Chapter 10: Support infrastructure: civilian women, Cumann na mBan and Protestant families
Chapter 11: Aftermath and legacies
Looking Forward
Chapter 12: Towards an archaeology of the Irish Civil War
References and sources
Appendices
Appendix 1: Archaeological context register
Appendix 2: Archaeological finds register
Appendix 3: Archaeological ecofact register
Appendix 4: Photogrammetry, cave survey and laser scanning – Robert Mulraney, James Bonsall and Liamóg Roche
Appendix 5: Geomorphological and geological setting, and mortar analysis – John G. Kelly
Appendix 6: Prehistoric lithics – Cian Hogan
Appendix 7: Pottery and glass – Clare McCutcheon
Appendix 8: Mammal bones – Fiona Beglane
Appendix 9: Fish and bird bones – Sheila Hamilton-Dyer
Appendix 10: Radiocarbon dates – T. Rowan McLaughlin
Appendix 11: Conservation of metal artefacts – Susannah Kelly
Appendix 12: Forensic analyses – John P. Cassella
Appendix 13: Weather conditions in September 1922 – James Bonsall
Appendix 14: Project outputs and public outreach
Marion Dowd is a Lecturer of Archaeology at Atlantic Technological University Sligo. Her research focuses on the archaeology of Irish caves, from earliest prehistory through to recent times. More recently, she has begun to explore the relationship between folklore and archaeology.
Robert Mulraney is an archaeologist, ecologist and speleologist. He has a special interest in cave explorton, mapping and photography and endevaours to detail the historical events, stories and folklore that develop around the underground and other liminal places.
James Bonsall is an archaeologist who specialises in geophysical surveys, remote sensing and geographical information systems (GIS). He is the director of Fourth Dimension Prospection Ltd. He applies his skills to research conflict archaeology and the efficacy of geophysical techniques in Ireland.