What happened our Pompeii?
Transcription
What happened our Pompeii?
4 news KILKENNY PEOPLE - FRIDAY NOVEMBER 11 - 2011 www.kilkennypeople.ie Newtown - a trading town of great importance THE find is an exciting An artists inmpression by Uto Hogerzeil of the deserted 12th century medieval town at Newtown, Jerpoint. Picture: Michael Brophy What happened our Pompeii? TO put it in context as a medieval urban settlement, the town of Newtown would have housed 400-500 people at its peak. It was enclosed and had a church, courthouse, and defensive towers. It boasted a river crossing of the Nore, a toll bridge basically where everything that crossed - human, sheep or grain - was paid for. A thriving local economy of a medieval time when Ireland’s population was just over 200,000 - and the population of Kilkenny city almost 1,000. So Newtown was half the size of Kilkenny at the time, and an important trade route on the way to the port of New Ross. It’s neighbours Thomastown and Bennetsbridge survived and thrived - yet the answer to why Newtown became Kilkenny’s Pompeii lies just across t h e r o a d a t Je r p o i n t Abbey. The local Cistercian order were significant landowners in Leinster - farming 20,000 acres. Their industry was the key factor in ensuring t h a t Ne w t ow n w a s a destination of not just prayer but of trade. When King Henry VIII had his troubles with Rome, and founded the Church of England, the monasteries were brought to heel. And Jerpoint Abbey was targeted. Legend has it that the first ‘attack’ was survived by the monks hiding and avoiding the soldiers. When they left, the monks thought they were out of ear-shot one for Cóilín Ó Drisceoil - probably one of the most significant he has come across in his career working in the county with Kilkenny Archaeology. “The site itself was charted in the early 19th century, and the properties that were there have been known. There have been small excavations and artefacts were found in the 1980’s so it’s no surprise, but the fact that its now accessible and we are uncovering more is important. The people of Kilkenny should realise what is right on their doorstep and just come out here and experience it” said Cóilín Ó Drisceoil. He described it as Kilkenny’s Pompeii. Built around 1200 it was a trading town, half the size of Kilkenny. “It followed a trade route from Kilkenny City, to Bennetsbridge, then Newtown, then Thomastown and on to New Ross, which was the port of the Lord of Leinster,” he said. The towns reliance on the economy of the Cistercian abbey in Jerpoint was the key to its demise. That Priory was dissolved in 1540, and by the 1600’s Newtown was no more. Cóilín revealed that the town of Newtown and the church of St Nicholas was linked to the same Augustinian order as that of St Johns on John Street, Kilkenny. The trade off likely at the time was to maintain St John’s as St Nicholas’ went in to disrepair. “The fact that no tillage took place here saved the site. All the humps and bumps are here, there are dozens of examples of dwellings. The site is simply vast, its the best preserved example of a deserted town from the Norman age. Absolutely nowhere else like this where you can walk the streets and visualise the town. It’s pretty unique,” he added. Cóilín explained that the citizens of that time were called burgesses, and they had greater rights than the serfs in the fields working in rural Ireland. So to become a town dweller basically secured your economic future and standing and while your produce was subject to taxes, your rights were greater. There were 14 taverns in the town - testament to the pilgrimages that took place to St Nicholas tomb and the Cistercian Abbey. One of the earliest financial records dates from 1376, when the rebuilding of the bridge took place. There are various other financial transactions recorded - mainly the taxes to the local lord. “So few people know about this sight, but it’s important for the people of Kilkenny to know where they came from. “We’re really only at the starting point. Our research programme is on Newtown but just above the site is a towns land called Oldtown, so we would have to wonder was there a town there even further back from the date of Newtown and the residents moved to here,” said Mr Ó Drisceoil. and presumed it was safe to ring their bell for their brothers to return. Unfortunately it was not, the soldiers came back in a vengeful state and wreaked havoc on the monastery. Newtown’s fate was sealed. A passion for the project Cóilín Ó Drisceoil, Site Director with his daughter, Bea at the Jerpoint dig. Picture: Michael Brophy. A head on a plate THE two knights that brought the relic of St Nicholas to Newtown were De Denn and De Freyne - and both are immortalised on the tombstone of the Saint with carvings of their faces either side. De Den was a roguish character who lived in nearby Grennan Castle - next to the hurling grounds in Thomastown. When King John came to Ireland to get his taxes - De Den was on his hit list. He let it be known that when his army came to Grennan Castle, they wanted his head on a plate. So De Den had his staff prepare a lavish feast in the banqueting hall - but cut a hole in the middle of the table enough for his head to peep through. The feast was covered in cloth, and when King John arrived the cloth was pulled back for De Denn’s head to appear - as if on a plate. Moments later he sneezed and King John - the man not noted for his sense of humour as Robin Hood would have testified - broke in to laughter which was joined in by his knights. He told De Denn he could keep his head - but he had better pay his taxes. Joe O’Connell’s Border Collie Cap herds the wild Geese at Jerpoint Park. Picture: Michael Brophy. IT’S more than obvious that Joe and Maeve O’Connell are passionate about bringing the story of Newtown to life. For Joe, he sees himself as a caretaker of this historic site. “It’s just in our hands for the next 35 years or so, someone else can look after it then. None of the previous owners, intensively farmed the area through the centuries, so the site was spared and that’s a blessing. Maybe forty years ago I would have looked at things different, but certainly not now,” said Joe. Joe, a native of Carrick On Suir on the Waterford side, is farming all his life - and still is on a section of his 131 acre holding. But the site of Newtown is special. He learned as a young man a simple lesson when he chainsawed a half dozen beech trees on a farm of what hasty development can do and how it can never be fully recovered. A stroll with Joe O’Connell through the site is a guided tour not to be missed. He has garnered a lot of information, and is hungry for more. Jerpoint park h a s o f f e re d t o u r i s t s numerous attractions in a country setting. One such attraction is probably unique. Joe, and his champion sheepdog Cap, together provide a demonstration of sheepdog herding but it’s not a herd - but a flock of geese. If you want to see the geese herded and in full flight - just go down and visit and Joe will be happy to oblige. Unsure before you go - check out You Tube and search for Thomastown Credit Union Ltd Canon Carroll Memorial Scholarships for Third Level Students Details and Application Forms available from Credit Union Office Market Street, Thomastown. Closing date for applications Saturday 26th November 2011 Applicants must be members of Thomastown Credit Union Ltd Jerpoint Park. Basically, a herd of geese, including treacherous ganders, patrol the crowds but are quickly subdued with the arrival of Cap who ‘encourages’ the geese around the yard as if it was a scene of One Man and His dog - but with a significant difference. It’s just one of the attractions at Jerpoint Park- a country escape with pony and trap rides and fishing thrown in. Joe takes you through the streets of Newtown and how the Norman settlement once stood. he noted that previ ous farmers grew black thorn bushes around the old houses as a forme of natural barbed wire to keep their livestock off the stones. That in many respects has protected the integrity of the site. But it’s quite clear where the streets lined, and where the dwellings were and the LIDAR scan is the key to helping a visitor envisage this. The two partial structures that are still standi n g i s t h e g e m o f St Nicholas Church and graveyard, and one wall of the defensive tower in the middle of Newtown. To celebrate the feast day of St Nicholas on December 6, the grounds of Jerpoint Park will be open free to the public. Check out their website www. jerpointpark.com for further details. Heritage Council backing project THE Heritage Council continue to be enthusiastic supporters of the development of the site. Four years ago they produced a Heritage Conservation Plan for Newtown, Jerpoint and have been working on the site ever since. Head of Conservation at the Heritage Council Ian Doyle has described the site as “very important.” “As a failed town, its important to see the history of it and the proximity to Jerpoint Abbey is also very significant. But the setting of Newtown is fantastic, and what it makes it stand out not only in Ireland but possibly in Britain also is our ability to trace documentation to this 13th century site. We have the material to trace the history of the site.” He added. “At the moment, its a lovely walk, you would just lose hours there. It needs investment in securing the Church, and it needs somewhere to interprete the site,” said Mr Doyle. The Heritage Council, apart from the production of the Conservation Plan, have secured a wall of the medieval tower church. There was an project, ensuring that done. We’d love to help in the heart of the town, screen.’ “It was basically to added tower and to see the site is available to him (Joe O’Connell) with and have also cut back the ivy from St Nicholas separate the priest from a church in this setting the community for the the mills and of course The site of the dig with the ruins Jerpoint Abbey in the background. Church to help keep it secure. One of the fascinating aspects of St Nicholas Church is the ‘rood the congregation. There a re n o t t o o m a n y o f them surviving today. And the Church overall is quite big for a parish in a formal town is quite rare,” he said. Mr Doyle said they were happy to work with the O’Connells on the Picture: Michael Brophy next few centuries and the history of Newtown is preserved. “There’s a lot of exploration of the site to be there is the remains of the bridge in the water. The whole site requires significant further studies,” he said.