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Field Visit

Date June 1979

Event ID 1165369

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1165369

NR 191 649. On a precipitous headland, situated 900m WNW of Coul farmhouse and measuring 200m from E to W by 120m at its widest point, there are the slight remains of a stone-walled fort, with evidence of later occupation. The site is a strong one, since it is cut off from the mainland by two converging dry gullies which run up from narrow inlets to the SW and N, and almost the only feasible access to the summit is up a narrow rock-path which cuts obliquely across the SE flank. Here the cliff stands 9m above the gully, but elsewhere rises several times this height.

The fort wall is visible along only the SE side of the headland, appearing as a low band of rubble up to 3m broad, with several stretches of outer facing-stones still in position, standing up to 1m in height in seven rough courses at its sw end. At its E end the wall is built on the very edge of the cliff, turning slightly inwards at the point where the access-path passes through it, which probably marks the position of the original entrance. Farther W, the wall leaves the outer cliff to follow the line of a higher cliff separated from the lower by a grassy terrace; after crossing the SE end of a wide transverse gully, it returns to the edge of the outer cliff and continues intermittently almost as far as the extreme sw tip of the headland. No traces of walling can be seen round the seaward perimeter. The summit of the headland is very uneven, consisting of large expanses of bare rock with limited areas of turf between them.

Evidence of later occupation is provided by a wall, built mainly of turf and standing up to 0.5m in height, which overlies the inner edge of the debris of the fort wall in its E sector and extends beyond the point where the fort wall ends, and continues along the top of the cliffs on the NE side of the headland. It crosses the presumed site of the original entrance without a break and, like the similar turf wall at Dun Bheolain (RCAHMS 1984 No. 144), appears to have had no defensive function. Probably associated with it are the foundations of a two-roomed rectangular building which measures 17m by 7m over roughly coursed drystone walls about 1m thick; the larger room has two opposed doorways 1m wide, with a narrower opening giving access to the smaller room. To the N of the building, and on level patches elsewhere, there are traces of former cultivation. Pennant, who visited the site in 1772, remarked on the 'vestiges of ancient habitations' (Pennant 1772).

RCAHMS 1984, visited June 1979

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