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(Posted 17.05.04) Authors Forward:
'With regard to this report readers
please note that a mistake has been made in a newspaper article about this item
which has travelled around the world onto various media websites. The article
states that "A number of prehistoric musical instruments made from bone,
including simple flutes and whistles dating back more than 100,000 years, have
already been uncovered in Ireland". This should of course read that they
have been uncovered in Europe not including Ireland.'
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Archaeologists
for Margaret Gowen & Co. Ltd recently made the unique discovery of a set of
prehistoric pipes, thought to be from a musical instrument.
Engaged by Mountbrook Homes and Ballymore Properties Ltd to fulfil a planning
requirement to monitor site preparation work for a residential development at
The Glen, Charlesland, Greystones, Co. Wicklow, the archaeological team under
director Bernice Molloy made the discovery during the archaeological
excavation of a burnt mound (Fulacht Fiadh) site.
The site, thought to be a cooking site, is one of several partially preserved
sites revealed by soil stripping and archaeological investigation which are
related to Bronze Age settlement in the location. The archaeological sites
have been revealed, investigated and fully recorded in a highly successful,
collaborate project with Mountbrook Homes and Ballymore Properties Ltd.
The find consisted of six, graded cylindrical wooden pipes, five arrayed side
by side at the bottom of a well-preserved rectangular, wood-lined trough that
once held water. The largest is damaged but was over 50cm long. The pipes had
been covered and possibly concealed when the site was abandoned. A peg used in
the construction of the wooden trough lining has been radio-carbon dated to
between 2120BC and 2085BC.
Back in the laboratory, careful cleaning and initial research on the
slender and beautifully crafted pipes has identified that they are made of yew
wood. They are not perforated, like a recorder or flute, but do have features
that suggest they are a set, and that they were attached to something that no
longer survives.

With no direct parallels for the pipes, work has been under way to establish
what kind of an instrument the pipes might have come from. The experts
consulted suggest that the pipes, which lack finger holes (like those on a
wooden flute tin whistle or recorder), may have formed part of a multi-flute
instrument or pipe organ. These instruments utilise the different lengths of
the air column in the pipes to generate the melodic or harmonic content of the
instrument’s musical sound.

(Click to listen)
At present, experts including Dr. Peter Holmes, an expert in the
reconstruction of ancient instruments from the UK and Simon O’Dwyer, who is
shortly to publish a book on early Irish musical instruments, and have been
assisting the archaeologists in the analysis of the pipes. Dr. Ann Buckley
from University College, Maynooth and Frank Cullen and artist and wood carver
have also examined the pipes.
Coincidently, work on other early Irish wooden musical instruments has been
under way and two papers written by Greer Ramsey of the Armagh County Museum
and a Scottish expert, John Purser, are shortly to be published by the Ulster
Journal of Archaeology.
The combined weight of research and expertise assembled so far suggests that
the find is truly unique and that we may have the remains of the earliest
wooden piped instrument ever found in an archaeological context in Europe.
Research suggests that the earliest recorded wooden musical instruments from
an archaeological context date to the 5-6th century BC while the pipes from
Charlesland are more than 1000 years older. On the other hand, simple bone
flutes and whistles have been found from earliest prehistory going back to
Neanderthal man. So, music formed an important part of prehistoric life.
Ireland does not lack musical instruments of prehistoric date. Most notable
are the truly spectacular cast bronze horns of the later Bronze Age and Iron
Age. The only other wooden instruments, all made of yew wood also, are a set
of four curved pipes from Killyfadda, Co. Tyrone (400BC) the Bekan Horn from
Co. Mayo dating to 700AD and a short conical wooden horn from the River Erne
in Co. Fermanagh dated to 700AD also.
It is still unclear how the instrument might have been played. Nothing is
known of the mechanism, if any, used to make individual pipes ‘speak’ but the
assembled instrument might well have been a precursor to the ancient pipe
organ. However, initial experiments have indicated that the pipes generate the
notes E flat, A flat and F natural. E flat is common pitch for many ancient
Irish horns.
The method of creating the hollow pipes is also not yet established but it is
clear that a lathe was not used.
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