Friday, October 30, 2009

Plays, Talks and Ancestors!



There are a lot of events coming up in the next few weeks, and your support as always will be greatly valued. On Monday 9th November, Thurles Drama Group will be opening a run at the Source of its new show ‘Flying Feathers’ by Derek Benfield, which promises to be a great evening of comedy. Very generously the Drama Group and the Source have offered the opening night to Cabragh Wetlands as a Benefit Night and fundraising event (though with that title, a conservation charity does seem the right choice!). Please get your tickets and come along to a cheese and wine reception at the Source at 7.30pm, with the curtain due to rise at 8.15. We look forward to seeing you there. http://www.thesourceartscentre.ie/whats_on/view_event.php?Event_ID=331

The Friday before that (November 6th) An Taisce is hosting an evening on Climate Change at the Convent Hall in Nenagh, starting at 8.00pm. The speakers will be Eanna ni Lamnhna and Jon Sweeney. Eanna’s abilities as an inspirational speaker are second to none, while Jon Sweeney has a great reputation as a man who can get across the growing urgency of the climate crisis and also clarify the key scientific detail that can be so confusing to the average non-scientist. There is likely to be no more pressing issue than this over the next century, so don’t miss this opportunity to improve your understanding of what is inevitably a complex issue.

While one crisis forces us to look ahead, it is no bad thing to look back and see what was going on in previous centuries at Cabragh Wetlands. Many thanks to our local history correspondent for researching the following material. From the many archaeological sites close to Cabragh Wetlands it seems that the marsh itself had a lot to offer the people of former times. Between Cabragh Castle and Holycross Abbey the bend of the river Suir encloses the wetlands, with higher ground found on its western edges. There are at least ten prehistoric sites on the Record of Monuments and Places (RMP) Maps. If we travel a little further south to Graiguenoe the ring barrows there suggest that late Bronze Age people lived in the area some 3000 years ago. The most obvious sites on the western fringes of the wetlands are the ring forts and some moated sites.

A ring fort is a Celtic (500BC) farmstead. It is a circular area enclosed by an earthen bank. The material for this bank was thrown up from inside thus creating a fosse. Inside the flat area different types of buildings were constructed; these would probably have been thatched circular structures with wattle and daub or sod walls. On the bank outside a strong fence of stakes would give security from wild animals or enemies. Usually one family occupied the fort, and when the group grew too big another fort would be constructed close by.

How did the Celtic people use the wetlands? The most obvious use was the natural protection the marsh and the river afforded them. They also used the wetlands and river for food. They probably fished and killed wild animals that came to drink, including deer and wild boar. They more than likely enjoyed the meat of wild duck and geese. The presence of a fullacht fia close to the wetlands gives evidence of communal cooking. We can only speculate on the uses they made of the marsh. The archaeological sites show us that people lived here since the Bronze Age. The secrets of these beautiful landscapes features await excavations by future generations. It’s our duty in the meantime to value them as part of our rich heritage, and also to think about how our ancestors lived in balance with their local environment for many millenia. We have much to learn from them.

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