Excavation of an early church and a women's cemetery at St Ronan's medieval parish church, Iona

Jerry O'Sullivan (Author)

Stephen Carter (Contributor)

Dianne Dixon (Contributor)

Daphne Lorimer (Contributor)

Gordon Turnbull (Contributor)


Keywords:
Human Bones, Cemetery, Church, Parish Church, Graves, Womens Cemetery, Pottery
Period(s):
Medieval, Early Modern, Early Medieval

Abstract


St Ronan's was the medieval parish church of lona. Excavation within the church recorded remains of an earlier building and graves of various dates, from the early medieval to the modern period. The sex of earlier remains  could not be determined, but all of the later skeletal remains were of women or children, and records attest to  the use of the site as a women's cemetery until the mid-18th century. The discussion considers the antiquity  and origins of the women's cemetery and describes some possible Irish parallels.   The earliest graves were overlain by the wall remnants of a small, unicameral, stone building — probably a church — with clay-bonded and whitewashed walls. The remains of the building were incorporated into the foundations of the medieval parish church. Parallels for the fabric and treatment of the masonry are known  from some  other pre-Romanesque Scottish churches.    Finds from the excavation included a cross-inscribed slab, bronze and bone pins, coffin fittings and nails,  fragments of decorated bronze objects and three medieval coins.    The excavation was funded by the lona Cathedral Trust and Historic Scotland.

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Published
30-11-1995
How to Cite
O'Sullivan, J., Carter, S., Dixon, D., Lorimer, D., & Turnbull, G. (1995). Excavation of an early church and a women’s cemetery at St Ronan’s medieval parish church, Iona. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 124, 327–365. https://doi.org/10.9750/PSAS.124.327.365
Section
Articles