
The Heritage Council
The Heritage Council
3 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2023 - 2025Partners:Friends of the Derry Walls, National Monuments Service, Derry City and Strabane District Council, Bradford 2025, Limerick County Council +8 partnersFriends of the Derry Walls,National Monuments Service,Derry City and Strabane District Council,Bradford 2025,Limerick County Council,Leica Geosystems Ltd,Bradford Metropolitan District Council,Historic Environment Scotland,Bradford Irish Society,University of Bradford,Discovery Programme,The Heritage Council,BRADFORD METROPOLITAN DISTRICT COUNCILFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: AH/Y007409/1Funder Contribution: 132,147 GBPThe proposed joint UK-Ireland research in the digital humanities, will utilise novel digital twin technologies funded through the AHRC Capabilities for Collections scheme (PI: Wilson 2022-3) in order to digitally document two medieval walled towns in the South (Kilmallock) and North (Derry) of Ireland and link with historic records to reveal hidden insights into these settlements for wide-ranging use. The project aims to: 1) bring together cutting-edge digital heritage technologies (incl vehicle- and back-pack mounted mobile mapping and drone-based capture), alongside place-based humanities research to connect historic environment research with geospatially accurate 3D information of buildings and townscape heritage, including specific archaeological context for key buildings through targeted geophysical prospection (e.g. immediate surroundings of the Dominican Priory of Kilmallock that lies outside the historic town walls); and 2) raise the profile of townscape heritage assets for a variety of purposes ranging from conservation and regeneration initiatives in support of designated properties/ sites, through to education, tourism, health and wellbeing. Cutting edge 3D digital mobile mapping technologies enable accurate and rapid survey that offers a transformative step-change in safeguarding unique heritage assets for the future. The approach will also place community-focused records (maps, deeds, oral histories) and specific building interiors in context and will contribute to heritage understanding for residents and visitors alike. The scale and rapid speed of these mobile capture methods offers new potential use-cases for development of 'discovery' resources for interpretation, education, tourism and orientation of newcomers. Their accuracy serves as valuable baseline data for monitoring future change, as well as offering a lens for direct comparison with original 16th century map records for Kilmallock and Derry. The meaning and value of heritage assets are understood through their role in placemaking, and contribution to identity and community cohesion, offering benefits to health and wellbeing as well as generating economic value through tourism and regeneration. Beyond unknown/ unrecovered archaeological evidence, issues of access in a variety of forms, are key limitations for realising the value of heritage for society. The work will build from expertise at Bradford developed in previous projects, including via infrastructure investment through CapCo and knowledge exchange via the AHRC Place Programme, and via relationships established through pilot work conducted during the AHRC/IRC Digital humanities network. The proposed project aligns with aspirations of the Built Heritage Advisory Section of the National Monuments Service and the Irish Walled Towns Network of the Heritage Council to preserve the historic building fabric, with the community and building owners/ occupiers. The utility of digital twin technologies in place-based research will help to monitor and conserve heritage assets and to layer narratives and understanding of each place upon the digital twin, from the Medieval period up to present day and in this project, represents an important initiative that highlights historic, and creates new connections between North and South Ireland and England. Kilmallock and Derry are connected as members of the Irish Walled Towns Network and Bradford and Derry both have an industrial heritage linked to the textile industry. Derry was the first UK City of Culture and Bradford will be the next UK City of Culture. Transfer of knowledge and expertise between key stakeholders, including community groups and across three local authorities, will realise the potential of digital twinning between Kilmallock - Derry - Bradford in order to forge longstanding connections that offer key benefits past, present and future.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2028Partners:CARDIFF UNIVERSITY, TII, The Heritage Council, Cadw, National Museum WalesCARDIFF UNIVERSITY,TII,The Heritage Council,Cadw,National Museum WalesFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: MR/Y016238/1Funder Contribution: 1,133,120 GBP'Green health' and wellness may sound like 21st-century ideas; but medieval people believed strongly that having access to gardens and plants was an essential part of taking care of themselves and others. My research plan, to explore the gardens, plants, and green space of buildings like castles and monasteries and records left by medieval people as well as plants living in the landscape today, can trace the ways in which the 'green' environment was used to maintain health. This project will bring different areas of research together to understand, how, why and in what ways medieval people used plants and gardens to stay healthy. Medieval Green Lives will investigate the ways people maintained their health across aristocratic, ordinary and religious communities in Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England during the later medieval period (1100 - 1600 AD). I want to look at the roles of gardens in medieval health care by examining how these spaces were used in monasteries, castles and ordinary homes. I will review these alongside the written records of garden design and plant sharing, as well as living plants. Bringing together different parts of social and scientific archaeology, history and botany, this project examines 40 case-study sites from the Atlantic Isles (of Ireland and Britain); whose shared historic past is indicated by common buildings, plants and documents, each of which retained distinct regional differences. Interestingly, humans needing care is widely perceived as a necessary part of life - yet it's rarely explored in stories of the past. However, evidence of this is readily available: people's lives (actions, relationships and experiences) can be accessed through surviving material from this time e.g. artefacts, buildings and historic documents. Like today, people in the past entered into relationships with other people, places, plants and things. Here, these actions are understood as practices - ways of doing things that mean something. I want to access this 'doing' in its material and spatial form to fully understand what a healthy life might have been like. Focussing on 'the traces of things people did' with plants and gardens, I will seek to offer a new way of thinking about health in ordinary, religious and lay households e.g. why particular plants were included in gardens, why some gardens were enclosed with masonry or how medieval people liked to look at beautiful flowers as part of their healthy regimen. Some of these plants survive in our landscapes today, though surprisingly, these plants from the medieval period (green heritage) are ignored or forgotten at heritage sites across the UK and Europe. Often it is the conservation of medieval buildings or the stories of famous past people that are prioritised, not the outdoors element of the lifestyle. At many sites, walls are cleared of vegetation and lawns are perfectly manicured. This is completely at odds with how these places may have looked, smelled or felt in the medieval period. This ordering reduces biodiversity which is now more than ever important to challenging climate change. The plants that do survive are under-appreciated in terms of their contribution to biodiversity as well as their genetic importance to their own species. Highlighting the value of these surviving plants known as relicts is an important part of protecting green heritage. Engaging with different organisations including Cadw, Museum Wales, Heritage Council and Transport Infrastructure Ireland we will demonstrate through detailed survey how medieval heritage sites are and can become 'beacons for biodiversity' which responds to our own understandings of the health benefits of green space and its touristic value. If greater care and attention is given to relict plants and green spaces, heritage sites can become spaces of refuge for flora and fauna as well as 21st century people who need access to green space for their own wellbeing, just like medieval people already knew.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2021 - 2024Partners:Public Record Office of Northern Ireland, Discovery Programme, National Monuments Service, NMI, Manchester Metropolitan University +9 partnersPublic Record Office of Northern Ireland,Discovery Programme,National Monuments Service,NMI,Manchester Metropolitan University,TII,MMU,RCAHMW,Department for Communities NI,Department for Communities,National Monuments Service,The Heritage Council,Royal Commission Monuments Wales RCAHMW,Heritage CouncilFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: AH/W001942/1Funder Contribution: 269,961 GBPThe development of the radiocarbon (14C) dating technique represents one of the most significant events in the history of archaeological thought; with this innovative method archaeology really started again in the 1950s. Identifying when things happened in time (as well as where things happened in space) is central to the archaeological endeavour. Since the 1950s millions of pounds/euro have been spent in Ireland and the UK producing 14C measurements in order to undertake archaeological research. These measurements have been funded by government heritage agencies, by academic researchers, by archaeologists in professional practice, by local societies, and by research agencies including the IRC and the AHRC. The numbers of these data have significantly increased in the UK with changes in central planning policy, from Planning Policy Guidance 16 onwards and with the development of professional archaeological practice as part of the construction industry. In the Republic of Ireland, the construction boom associated with the 'Celtic Tiger' economy had a similar impact on the scale of the production of 14C data. The rapid expansion in the numbers of 14C data also underlines how central they are to all forms of archaeology, produced from every type of archaeological site, from the whole 60,000 years of human history when the technique can be used. However, 14C data can only be used effectively in subsequent research if they are correctly reported (Bayliss 2015; Millard 2014); because of a lack of training across the sector essential data attributes are often not reported or made publuc by researchers. If these attributes are lost or removed from radiocarbon measurements their utility becomes compromised and their value lessened. Ironically, given the importance of these data, there has been a global failure to curate them effectively. Across the UK and Ireland, there is no single functioning 14C archive. Because of this, millions of euros/pounds of data are being made rogue - with inaccurate, incomplete, or otherwise compromised 14C attributes often present in research literature. Moreover, the absence of international digital archives for these essential data is a significant barrier to research that seeks to work across national historic environment agency jurisdictions. This has major issues globally for archaeological research, and is especially true for Ireland and the UK, where many research objectives exist across borders, with datasets that do not respect the confines of contemporary nation states. Further, reporting standards mean that many existing 14C data are not interoperable with existing historic environment data management systems. The result is that we are impoverishing vast quantities of data of huge value, and that our research into, analyses of, and curation of the historic environment are similarly compromised. This project will address this significant, international problem for all archaeological research periods by transforming available data from across Ireland and the UK, reconstituting the essential attributes, and safeguarding these data for the future. We will use these data to achieve innovative Big Data analyses into the management of the historic environment, and into archaeological research across all periods and regions of the UK and Ireland. Our lasting legacy will be making these data and our analyses discoverable, open access, sustainable and functional for researchers to come, providing a sector-wide training legacy, and developing schools resources to educate the next generation of digital humanities researchers in the historic environment. We are supported in this work by our historic environment partners in national government, and national heritage agencies, and the digital infrastructure provided by the Archaeology Data Service which will secure this invaluable resource for the future.
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