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Archaeology Watch |
The Hill of Tara is one of the most important archaeological sites in Ireland. In use since ca. 4000 B.C., at first as a burial ground and religious center, it was also a center of Irish kingship and a key medieval site. It stands in the midst of a larger landscape containing a wealth of related sites and monuments. Now, Tara and the surrounding landscape are threatened by a proposed major highway (the M3) that will cut through the landscape and divorce Tara from the related sites that surround it.
Update: July, 2005
Update: April, 2005
At the request of Irish archaeologists who are working to save Tara, AIA President Jane C. Waldbaum, with the approval of the AIA's Executive Committee, wrote a letter which was published in the Irish Times on March 31, 2004, urging the protection of the site and the integrity of its landscape. A similar letter signed by a number of prominent British archaeologists was published by the Irish Times on April 5th. International efforts to save the Tara landscape are effective! On April 5th, Jane Waldbaum received this news from Dr. Niamh Whitfield, one of the organizers of these efforts: To bring things up to date: on Monday 5 April 2004 the National Roads Authority invited campaigners to a meeting. The fact that the AIA letter had been published in the Irish Times the previous Wednesday, together with the very fortunate publication that morning of a letter from leading British archaeologists, was an immense help. The publication of two such authoritative letters supporting the objections of the local group does seem to have had some impact on those with the power to change this decision, though, of course, there was no immediate change of heart. At present the NRA plan to issue contracts for road building on 14 April, so there is now a very small window of opportunity for protests For more information on the efforts to save Tara, including an online petition to the President of Ireland, which the AIA supports, see www.taraskryne.org. |
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