Accessibility

Font Size

100% 150% 200%

Background Colour

Default Contrast
Close Reset

Pricing Change

New pricing for orders of material from this site will come into place shortly. Charges for supply of digital images, digitisation on demand, prints and licensing will be altered. 

 

Publication Account

Date 2002

Event ID 1019620

Category Descriptive Accounts

Type Publication Account

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1019620

This oval building is situated on a terrace at the edge of later rig cultivation. It measures 8m in length by 4.3m in breadth within a wall 2m thick, faced both inside and out with large stones. The entrance, 2.1m wide, is at the east end, flanked by the remains of a flat facade. An upright stone stands on each side of the entrance at its outer edge, immediately in front of the facade, but it is not clear whether these are original features. A sub-rectangular cell built onto the outer face of the S wall, and measuring internally 6m by 2.5m is probably a much later structure.

The closest parallels for this building are to be found amongst the oval prehistoric houses on Shetland, with which it shares many characteristics. The thick, stone-faced walls with an entrance at one end are defining features of the Shetland houses. Many of them (e.g. Stanydale Temple, Benie Hoose, and Sumburgh) have stone facades and one site (Loch of Collaster) features a pair of boulders outside the entrance (admittedly set a distance of 1m from the outer wall face, but nevertheless reminiscent of the stones at Galmisdale). Most of the Shetland houses have small cells or alcoves set into their walls; no such features can be identified at Galmisdale, though most of the inner facing stones are missing and it may be that small cells would be revealed by excavation. One problem with identifying the Galmisdale building as a house, though, is the width of its entrance. A possible answer is that there was a substantial timber component. At Scord of Brouster the entrance measured 1.3m in width, but the excavator identified two possible post-holes which may have narrowed the doorway; a similar arrangement may be postulated at Galmisdale. The earliest dates from the oval houses of Shetland come from House 1 at Scord of Brouster, constructed in the late Neolithic, around 3000 BC, but the form continues in use into the Bronze Age, and with variations, into late prehistory.

While houses of this type are largely a Shetland phenomenon, one prehistoric building with a generally similar ground plan has been recorded in the Outer Hebrides. This was an oval structure discovered in sand dunes at Northton on Harris, which measured internally 8.5m by 4.2m. Occupation of the house was associated with Beaker pottery, and a single C-14 date of 3080 +/- 150BC was obtained.

Information from ‘RCAHMS Excursion Guide: Commissioners' Field Excursion, The Small Isles, 23-26 September 2002’.

People and Organisations

References