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The Archaeological Survey of Ireland is a unit of the National Monuments Service, which is currently managed by the Department of Housing, Local Government and Heritage. The unit maintains a database of all known archaeological monuments and sites in Ireland that date from before 1700 with few selected monuments of the post-1700 period. The ...
The Miscellany of the Irish Archaeological Society. [8] In 1851 was published: The History of the Survey of Ireland commonly called The Down Survey by Doctor William Petty A.D. 1655-6, written by William Petty in 1659, and edited by Thomas Aiskew Larcom. In 1855 was published: Leabhar Imuinn: The Book of Hymns of the Ancient Church of Ireland.
The O'Connell Monument in Ennis, County Clare, is record number 20000001 in the NIAH database. The National Inventory of Architectural Heritage (NIAH) maintains a central database of the architectural heritage of the Republic of Ireland covering the period since 1700 in complement to the Archaeological Survey of Ireland, which focuses on archaeological sites of the pre-1700 period.
The Record of Monuments and Places (RMP; Irish: Taifead ar Shéadchomharthaí agus Áiteanna) is a list of historical and archaeological sites the Republic of Ireland established under the National Monuments Acts.
The stone circles of Britain, Ireland, and Brittany. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08347-5. National Monuments Service. "Historical Environment Viewer". Archaeological Survey of Ireland. Ó Nualláin, Seán (1975). "The Stone Circle Complex of Cork and Kerry". Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland. 105: 83–131. JSTOR ...
Ireland archaeology stubs (41 P) Pages in category "Archaeology of Ireland" ... Archaeological Survey of Ireland; Association of Young Irish Archaeologists;
The prehistory of Ireland has been pieced together from archaeological evidence, which has grown at an increasing rate over the last decades. It begins with the first evidence of permanent human residence in Ireland around 10,500 BC [ 1 ] (although there is evidence of human presence as early as 31,000 BC [ 2 ] ) and finishes with the start of ...
In 1952, as part of the Archaeological Survey of Northern Ireland, A.E.P ('Pat') Collins, conducted the first archeological excavation of the Audleystown tomb and published his findings in 1954. The Ministry of Finance assumed guardianship of the site and declared it an ancient monument. After the 1952 excavation, the burial galleries were ...