Haughey's Fort
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Haughey's Fort is a hill fort in County Armagh, Northern Ireland, 3.6km (2.25 miles) west of the city of Armagh. It is named after the farmer who owned the land it is situated on in the later 19th century.
It consists of an oval enclosure, 350m (1150 feet) across at it's widest point, surrounded by two concentric ditches. Inside the enclosure another ditch encloses an area 150m (490 feet) in diameter. Archaeological excavation shows that it was occupied in the late Bronze Age, ca. 1100 to 900 BC, after which it was abandoned, although some artifacts discovered were of Iron Age date, suggesting that it was later reoccupied. It was contemporary with the nearby artificial pool known as the King's Stables, but was abandoned before Navan Fort, 1km to the east, was occupied.
[edit] References
- Chris Lynn, Navan Fort: Archaeology and Myth, Wordwell Books, 2003
- J. P. Mallory, "The Other Twin: Haughey's Fort", Ulidia, December Publications, 1994