Linda Boutoille, Dirk Brandherm – THE BISHOPSLAND HOARD: A REASSESSMENT
Discovered in 1942 at Bishopsland, Co. Kildare, the Bishopsland hoard is one of the most diverse and technologically significant Bronze Age metalwork assemblages from Ireland. Comprising both metalworking tools and a range of other utiliarian as well as non-utilitarian items, it provides a rare insight into the technological and social transformations of the later 2nd millennium BC. We re-evaluate the assemblage’s chronological and functional context, situating the hoard within a broader Atlantic European framework. Cross-comparison with British and Continental material demonstrates that the Bishopsland assemblage aligns with the Penard rather than the Taunton phase of the British Bronze Age sequence (c. 1280–1140 BC) and marks the introduction of advanced metalworking techniques such as complex sheet working and lost-wax casting. These innovations reveal increasing craft specialization, tied to elite display and social differentiation. We argue that the Bishopsland phase defines the earliest stage of the Irish Late Bronze Age.
Reference as:
Boutoille L, Brandherm D. 2025. The Bishopsland hoard: a reassessment. UISPP Journal 7, 39–75. https://doi.org/10.62526/Y76QVZ