Abstract

Abstract This paper explores the nature of assembly practices in early medieval Ireland (AD 400–1100). It focuses specifically on the oenach, the pre-eminent assembly of each level of community and kingdom in Irish society, and it engages critically with how assembly as a topic has been traditionally understood and analyzed by Irish scholarship. Through analysis of the nature of the oenach, I suggest that the predominantly economistic interpretation of this institution by Irish scholarship is misplaced and that rather the oenach was an Irish equivalent of pan-European assembly practices. Accordingly, this paper explores the character of oenaig (plural of oenach) in the context of this pan-European phenomenon. Furthermore, some preliminary results from ongoing research offer insights into the archaeological manifestation of assembly practices, the spatial dynamic of assembly landscapes, and the implications of the same for our understanding of civil society, scales of identity, and the practice of assembly...

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