A History of Ireland in 100 Objects: Neolithic bowl, c 3500 BC

The bowl is simple enough, very dark with burnished surfaces and relatively crude lattice-pattern decorations


The bowl is simple enough, very dark with burnished surfaces and relatively crude lattice-pattern decorations. It was probably used for drinking and similar vessels have been found elsewhere in Ireland.

Yet, because of the context in which it was found, this everyday object is extraordinarily eloquent. It tells us a great deal about the lives of some of the earliest Irish farmers.

It was discovered along with remains of three other pots in 1992 in a small cave in Annagh, north Co Limerick, that contained three full human skeletons, two other sets of partial remains, various animal bones and a flint blade and arrowhead. The pots tell us that the people were farmers. The other objects tell us that they were also hunters and warriors.

Two big things thus emerge from this ancient grave.

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One is the reality that the development of agriculture was accompanied by considerable violence. The other is that it didn’t happen all at once, that socially and culturally people retained their links to an older, wilder way of life.

Clearing land was hard work: the skeletons, which are all those of men, show the wear and tear of vigorous lives and the carrying of heavy weights. This hard-won territory had to be defended, and conversely offered an attractive prize for outsiders.

The men who were chosen for burial at Annagh seem to have been veteran local champions or heroes. They had survived a long time: two of them were into their 50s when they died – perhaps 20 years older than the norm. And they had survived serious violence. Two had serious head injuries, one a broken nose, one a fractured rib. In one case, the blow to the skull was delivered with such force that it must have come from something like a slingshot. Beside the plain domesticity of the bowl, there are the vestiges of brutal struggles.

The grave dates from the same era as the grand passage tombs such as Newgrange, but may reflect the continuation of older cultural practices. In this regard, the careful arrangement of hunter’s apparatus (blade and arrowhead) with a selection of animal bones is particularly resonant. The animal bones were brought specially to the cave, and they represent both the old, wild world and the new order of agriculture.

On the one hand, there are bones from a bear, a wolf, a wild boar and a deer – creatures of the forest. On the other, there are bones of sheep and cattle – the domestic beasts raised by farmers.

Raghnall Ó Floinn of the National Museum, who led the excavation at Annagh, believes that this arrangement is deliberate and indicates a culture that is still in the midst of a long transition.

Farming was the dominant way of life, but the call of the wild was still heard. Even as they cleared land and herded cattle, these local heroes may still have thought of themselves as proud hunters.


Thanks to Raghnall Ó Floinn at the National Museum

Where to see it: National Museum of Ireland, Kildare Street, Dublin 2, museum.ie