Deer and identity in medieval Ireland
Abstract
The concept that identity is inextricably linked with places, landscapes and objects has
become familiar in archaeology (Thomas 1998, 80, 90; Bradley 2000, 155-61; O'Keeffe
2001). It is only recently however that this idea has been extended to animals and their
interaction with human society (Crabtree 2007, 237). This paper examines how deer
hunting was used to maintain identity in medieval Ireland, a country in which two very
different cultures co-existed. Until the twelfth century Ireland was predominantly
Gaelic with the coastal cities such as Dublin and Limerick having been founded by the
Vikings. This changed with the coming of the Anglo-Normans in the late twelfth
century when they settled in Ireland and introduced their own culture (Barry 2003, 35-
6). The paper will discuss the different arenas in which hunting took place in Gaelic
and Anglo-Norman society before providing an overview of what is known about
fallow deer and deer parks in Ireland. To illustrate the differences in approach between
the cultures two case studies based on the author’s analysis of the faunal assemblages
are presented, with Kilteasheen being a Gaelic site and Greencastle being AngloNorman.
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