The Tully Lough Cross is an 8th- or 9th-century Irish altar or processional cross discovered in 1986 at the bottom of Tully Lough, County Roscommon. Although its origin is unknown, archaeologists associate it with a church in Kilmore, County Cavan. It was formed from a wooden core overlain with bronze sheets containing spirals influenced by Iron Age Celtic Ultimate La Tène style. Its dating is based on its use of amber and style of ornamentation.
When rediscovered, the Tully Lough Cross was badly damaged, and broken into pieces. It was repaired in the late 1980s when lost metal parts were replaced, and it was reconstruction based on similar crosses from contemporary Irish manuscript illustrations and high crosses.[2]
The divers failed to report the finding of this highly important object of national heritage to the Irish government, as required by law. One of them was later prosecuted for trying to sell it to a number of American museums, including the Getty in California at an offer price of $1.75m.
It was acquired by the NMI in 1990, where it is on permanent display.[3]
Discovery
The Tully Lough Cross was found by a diver in July 1986 at the bed of Tully Lough, County Roscommon, near a crannog (an artificial island used for dwelling). The divers failed, as required by law, to report the finding to the Irish government, and attempted to sell the item to a number of American museums. The Irish government learned of the sale when the J. Paul Getty Museum in California notified the National Museum of Ireland (NMI) that they had been contacted via a letter by "a lady in Massachusetts ... acting on behalf of two friends". She said she felt that, "a modest request would be 1.75 million dollars", before adding that she wanted the offer "kept in the utmost confidence".[5]
Dr Michael Ryan, then Keeper of Irish Antiquities at the NMI, informed the Getty that the cross had been "illicitly excavated from an Irish site ... and represents part of a pattern of plundering of our heritage which is currently the subject of a top-level investigation".[5] The investigation eventually led to one of the discoverers being convicted in the Athlone District Court,[5][6] after the Irish Government, at the request of the NMI, "decided to get tough with metal detectors and treasure hunters".[6]
The attempted sale led to a change in Irish law after the T.D.Tom Enright brought an amendment to the Irish Constitution prohibiting the foreign sale of historically significant heritage artefacts, and raised the minimal penalty from £50 to £50,000, or six months in prison.[6]
Description
The Tully Lough Cross was broken up into a number of pieces. Its reconstruction is 127 cm (50 in) high and 43.8 cm (17.2 in) wide.[7] It unknown whether it was dismantled before it was deposited in the lake or whether it broke on first impact with the lough bed, or disintegrated due to centuries of wear.[2] Archelogists estimate that it hidden around the mid-12th century, during the Irish Church reform.[1]
It was commissioned as either an altar or ceremonial processional cross. It was built from an oak core lined with plain tinned copper-alloy (bronze) sheets forming the upright arms and crosspiece. Tinned sheets were added to add a sheen reminiscent of silver.[7] These sheets are connected by tubular binding strips and at the middle by a halved joint, an iron nail, and bronze fittings shaped as animal heads. It contains a number of gilt pyramidal and circular bosses and mounts.[8] It contains about twenty surviving bronze panels,[6] many of which are highly decorated with ornate patterns and designs influenced by the late Iron AgeLa Tène style. Three contain interlace, and the two figurative panels, at the top of the upper arm and halfway down between the crosspiece and base, have openwork.[3] The reverse is less decorated but does contain bosses and mounts.[9]
The figurative panels are near-identical, with both showing a man dressed in a kilt reaching beyond his knees, standing between two confronted animals,[9] and may represent either the Nativity of Jesus as prophesied, according to some Christian interpretations, in Habakkuk 3:2 ("In the midst of two animals Thou shalt become known") or the biblical tale of Daniel in the lions' den.[9] The man's eyes are closed in the upper panel but open in the lower arm.[3]
Irish processional crosses
The cross bears a number of similarities to the 12th-century Cross of Cong, including its cusped cross-arms, elaborate glass studs, indicating that its basic form was in use for at least four centuries.[2]
Although there is no other surviving Irish contemporary cross of this type, representations of the form can be found in some manuscript illustrations and high crosses,[3] including the Ruthwell Cross found in Dumfriesshire, Scotland. The very similar Anglo-Saxon Cross of Saint Rupert is now in Bischofshofen, Austria.[10] Unlike the Cross of Cong, it is not thought to have been intended to contain a relic.[2] A very similar pyramidal mount was found in the West Midlands in England in 2014, and has also been dated to the 8th or 9th centuries.[11]
Murray, Griffin. "Irish crucifixion plaques: a reassessment. In: Mullins, Juliet; Ni Ghradaigh, Jenifer (eds): Envisioning Christ on the Cross: Ireland and the Early Medieval West. University of Notre Dame: Thomas F.X. Noble, 2014
Murray, Griffin. "The provenance of an Irish crucifixion plaque". Archaeology Ireland, volume 26, No. 4, Winter 2012. JSTOR41202729
"News: National Museum gets tough". Archaeology Ireland, volume 1, number 2, December 1987. JSTOR20558250