Accessibility

Font Size

100% 150% 200%

Background Colour

Default Contrast
Close Reset

Field Visit

Date 31 August 1915

Event ID 1105038

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1105038

Dun Raisaburgh.

At Raisaburgh, some 400 yards south-south-west of Loch Mealt, is a narrow, rocky ridge running almost due north and south, and rising from 30 to 50 feet above the surrounding moorland. Near its southern end, though not on the highest point, are the scanty ruins of a broch, Dun Raisaburgh. The wall is quite broken down on the east side, but for the remaining part of its circumference the outer face is still traceable; the inner face is quite indistinguishable, being either destroyed or covered with debris. On the south two and three courses of the outer face remain, on the west only the foundation course is traceable, but on the north about 2 feet of building appears above the debris which has accumulated at the bottom of the wall to a depth of some 2 or 3 feet. The external diameter of the building, which is measurable only from north to south, is 53 feet 3 inches. A length of 22 feet of a gallery in the thickness of the wall on the northern arc is clearly defined, its outer wall reaching a height of 3 feet in places. As the inner wall is much disturbed it is impossible to obtain the width of the gallery or the complete thickness of the wall of the broch. The entrance cannot be identified.

An outer defence crosses the ridge some 32 feet 6 inches south of the main building. It takes the form of a stone wall some 6 feet thick, now practically reduced to the foundation. This wall appears to have returned northwards along the eastern edge of the ridge as far as the chief structure, but on the west side, which is higher and steeper at this part, there is no appearance of a wall. Some 25 feet north of the broch there are very faint indications of another outer wall thrown across the ridge.

RCAHMS 1928, visited 31 August 1915.

OS map: Skye viii.

People and Organisations

References