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Islay, Beinn A' Chaisteal

Enclosure (Period Unassigned), Fort (Period Unassigned), Settlement (Period Unassigned)

Site Name Islay, Beinn A' Chaisteal

Classification Enclosure (Period Unassigned), Fort (Period Unassigned), Settlement (Period Unassigned)

Canmore ID 37526

Site Number NR27SW 5

NGR NR 2205 7118

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/37526

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Administrative Areas

  • Council Argyll And Bute
  • Parish Kilchoman
  • Former Region Strathclyde
  • Former District Argyll And Bute
  • Former County Argyll

Archaeology Notes

NR27SW 5 2205 7118.

NR 220 712. A fort (information from RCAHMS) has been formed by cutting off a rugged headland of 2 1/2 to 3 acres with a stone wall, 14ft wide, closely adapted to the outcrop ridges and entered by an 8ft gap 54ft. from the W end. The entrance is covered on the W inner side by a round guardroom 15ft in diameter. A possible approach nearer the middle of the wall is covered on each side by rectangular bastion-like expansions of the wall but appears to be blocked by walling. The site is called Beinn a' Chaisteil.

F Newall 1965.

A promontory fort of unusually large dimensions is generally as described by Newall. The wall cutting off the headland is somewhat tortuous, but maximises the natural defences of rock outcrop; it is reduced and turf covered up to 0.6m high, but some facing slabs are exposed indicating a wall thickness of about 2.0m The "round guard-room" noted by Newall is a fortuitous arrangement of tumble from the wall, and there is no trace of the "rectangular bastion-like expansions of the wall". No structures can be seen in the enclosed area.

Surveyed at 1:10 000.

Visited by OS (N K B) 19 June 1978.

Activities

Field Visit (May 1979)

Beinn a' Chaisteil is the name given to a prominent rocky headland which forms part of the rugged NW coastline of Islay w of Sanaigmore; rising to a height of 125m OD, it presents sheer cliffs to the NW and NE, but from the SE (landward) side there is relatively easy access up grassy or heathery slopes interspersed with rocky outcrops. Extending between it and Cnoc Uarnh narn Fear (128m OD) to the SW there is a broad, steep-sided, natural hollow, which is divided by a narrow inlet, Allt nam Ba. Situated on Beinn a' Chaisteil and in the gully below there is an unusual complex of remains, comprising what appear to be three elements that are not necessarily related to each other: a fort (A on the site-plan, RCAHMS 1984) occupying the summit of Beinn a' Chaisteil; settlement (B), lying around the foot of Beinn a' Chaisteil to the E of Allt nann Ba; and an enclosure (C), situated in a low-lying position on the neck of a rocky promontory W of Allt nam Ba.

FORT (NM 220 711). The defences are provided by a single stone wall drawn across the neck of the headland and cutting off a roughly triangular area of about 1.35ha. For most of its length the wall survives as a band of rubble core material with intermittent stretches of outer facing-stones still standing to a height of 0.4m in three courses; only one short length of inner face survives, near the sw end, indicating that at this point the wall was 3m thick. For almost its entire course the wall is founded on the natural rock, and several expanses of outcrop are incorporated within its structure. About half-way along its length it swerves sharply outwards to follow a particularly prominent outcrop, perhaps in order to provide extra defensive strength for what may be the position of an entrance (a on the RCAHMS plan), where the rubble is markedly thinner and where there is easy access from outside. At each end the wall terminates on the brink of the cliff, but on the SW, where it finishes in a coursed butt-end, access to the interior can be gained with little difficulty by way of two rocky ledges beyond and below it. No visible evidence remains of walling to block this line of approach, but without it the defensive effect of the rest of the wall would have been severely impaired; it could, however, have been easily dismantled and cast down the steep slope without trace, possibly for use in building the structures described below.

In addition to the possible entrance (a on RCAHMS plan) already mentioned a narrow transverse gap in the outcrop about 30m to the would have provided another suitable entry; between these two points there are traces of a medial face within the thickness of the wall. A third possible location for an entrance (b on RCAHMS plan) occurs towards the SW end, where the amount of debris is noticeably reduced. The interior, which is thickly covered with heather, shows no visible signs of structures.

SETTLEMENT (NM 219 711). The landward approach and part of the precipitous slopes on the E side of the Allt nam Ba are traversed by the remains of a massive drystone wall which is some 2m in average thickness and about 60m in surviving length from E tow. It incorporates a lintelled entrance passage (a on RCAHMS plan) which is slightly less than 2m in length and 0.75m in width; it is entered from the s where there are traces of low stone platform. At the rear of the wall there are surviving remains of two adjacent round-ended enclosures, and a possible hut-platform (b on RCAHMS plan) lies close to the rock-face that marks the E boundary of the site. Lower down the slopes of the E side of the inlet there is a second group of structures comprising traces of at least three buildings of circular plan. The largest and best-preserved of these (c on RCAHMS plan) measures over 4m in internal diameter within walls 0.5m in thickness, and has an entrance 0.6m wide in the S sector. There are no superficial indications of man-made structures on the grass plateau immediately to the E of the inlet, and a third main group of buildings and enclosures is found at the foot of the scree slopes in the rocky area to the NE. One hut survives (d on RCAHMS plan [NR 2194 7126]), relatively intact and has a slab-corbelled roof. It is of ovoid plan measuring 2.5m in length by 1.1m in width and 1.3m in height internally; the entrance is located in the S end-wall.

ENCLOSURE (NM 218 712) [Canmore ID 37513]. A massive drystone wall follows the line of a ridge across the promontory to the W of Allt nam Ba. It extends in an eastward direction for a distance of about 50m, and there is a further stretch of walling which straddles a gully to the NW. The wall, which measures over 2m in average thickness and stands to a maximum height of 1.3m, incorporates the foundations of what appear to be small intramural chambers of oblong plan entered externally from the S or W rather than from seaward. The best-defined specimen (e on RCAHMS plan) measures 1.6m in length by 0.6m transversely. It is also possible that one of these features may represent a modification to an original entrance comparable with that located in the stretch of walling on the NW. A later dyke extends southwards from this main E-W wall and is associated with a circular hut and enclosure in the centre of a narrow defile. There are indeterminate vestiges of other structures among the rocks to the W and on the hillside to the sw. A small burn which flows down the main gully from the SW is the only obvious source of fresh water in this vicinity.

The date and original purpose of the enclosure and settlement cannot be determined without excavation, but it is possible that both were associated, at least in their later phases, with grazing or sea fowling.

RCAHMS 1984, visited May 1979

Measured Survey (1979)

RCAHMS surveyed the fort, settlement and enclosure at Beinn a' Chaisteil in 1979.

The surveys included:

(i) a 1:2500 location map

(ii) a 1:400 plan of the eastern fort (A)

(iii) a 1:400 plan of the western fort (C) (called an enclosure by RCAHMS) and the intervening settlement (B)

(iv) a plan, section and elevation of a small corbelled building (d) within the settlement

The plans were redrawn in ink and published at reduced scales (RCAHMS 1984, figs. 78A, 78C, 79 and 90).

Note (29 September 2014 - 23 May 2016)

The remains of a promontory fort can be seen crowning the summit of a large promontory on the NW coast of Islay named Beinn a'Chaisteal, with an additional wall at the foot of the cliff on the W cutting off access to a lower shelf on the seaward side. The upper part of the fort on the summit of the promontory extends to about 1.3ha and is defended by a single wall, which can be traced across the rock outcrops on the SE. About 3m in thickness, the inner face only survives in two places, but fragments of the outer can be seen throughout its course, which dog legs sharply to take in a rectangular boss of outcrop on the crest of the promontory. The wall is heavily robbed and no certain evidence of an entrance can be identified, though access to the summit area is easily gained from the slope below the SW terminal of the wall. The wall at the foot of the cliff on the W, which was regarded by RCAHMS investigators as a separate enclosure, effectively cuts off a broad shelf on the seaward end of the promontory; it is 2m in thickness and retains a lintelled entrance passage 0.75m wide. Several stone structures can be seen immediately in its rear, at least one of which is evidently later in date than the wall, and there are a series of other stone structures scattered across the terrace to the N, including one with a corbelled roof; these are likely to relate to later usage of the area for pasture or fowling. The addition of this lower terrace gives the fort an overall area of 3.23ha

Information from An Atlas of Hillforts of Great Britain and Ireland – 23 May 2016. Atlas of Hillforts SC2128

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