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A Glimpse into the Past: Discovering Leather Arm-Rings from Co. Offaly’s Iron Age

Old Croghan Man is a well-preserved bog body from the Iron Age, discovered in Ireland in 2003. The body, belonging to a young man in his mid-20s, had several cuts and a noose around the neck, leading experts to speculate that he may have suffered a violent attack or been sacrificed. The low oxygen and acidic conditions in the bog helped to mummify the body, preserving the skin, hair, and internal organs. Old Croghan Man’s discovery has provided valuable insights into the lives of the ancient Celts in Ireland, and his body is now on display at the National Museum of Ireland in Dublin.

Ireland’s bogs hold secrets that rarely come to light, yet, offer so many details when they do. Old Croghan Man and Clonycavan Man are two bog bodies now on display at the National Museum of Ireland in Dublin.



And Isabella Mulhall, assistant curator of Antiquities at the National Museum of Ireland, knows their stories up close and personal. The bog bodies on display date back to the Iron Age. One was found not far from Galway. It has been thousands of years since they saw the light of day. They are perfectly preserved thanks to the conditions in the bog.

Mulhall says, “Bogs are dark and wet, and they have an amazing moss, which somehow creates the perfect conditions to keep a body intact. These conditions preserve the bones and the skin and some of the soft tissue that we study. These bodies have hair on them, textiles are intact, and even some of the soft tissue like organs that we study.”

Old Croghan Man bog body, 2003:14



These conditions do cause up to a 15% shrinkage in a body, so we have to take that into account when we figure how tall someone was, and the chemicals seem to turn a body and hair redder than they were in life, but so much of them is still there. Our team has been able to piece together what they ate before they were put in the bog, health conditions prior to death.

“It is amazing, and you can get so much more from a bog body than you could ever get from decomposed bodies and skeletons.”

The bog bodies all appear to have been killed in violent ways before they ended up there. Many were high in status among their communities, and most are missing limbs. But they all tell personal stories that make up a history never before understood.



The bog bodies have all been discovered through peat harvesting. Harvesting efforts have unearthed them over time. All have been found by mistake, not by a concerted effort to fin