Archaeology Notes
Event ID 696998
Category Descriptive Accounts
Type Archaeology Notes
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/696998
NR95NW 5 NR 90819 57794.
(NR 9078 5778) Skipness Castle (NR)
OS 6" map (1924)
Skipness Castle, one of the major medieval fortresses of the western seaboard, has had a long and complex history of architectural development. On the evidence now available, the site was first occupied some time in the first half of the 13th century, when a hall-house and chapel were constructed. Other buildings of stone or timber may have been erected about the same period, and the site enclosed by an earth and timber rampart.
About the turn of the 13th and 14th centuries the castle was enlarged and strengthened by the erection of a high curtain wall, within which the hall-house and chapel were incorporated. The chapel was secularised, its place being taken by one at NR 9100 5752 (NR95NW 6). The enceinte wall enclosed an oblong courtyard, with projecting towers at the NE and SE angles, and in the N section of the W wall. Within the courtyard, ranges of buildings stood against the S wall, and the N section of the E wall.
In the later Middle Ages, perhaps towards the beginning of the 16th century, the northernmost part of the E range of courtyard buildings was heightened by three upper storeys, and the upper portion of the adjacent section of the E curtain wall was rebuilt and provided with an embattled parapet walk. The transformation to a tower house was completed later in the 16th century by the reconstruction of the upper portion of the tower, and the removal of the remainder of the E courtyard range, to leave the tower free-standing on its S side.
The castle was abandoned about the end of the 17th century.
Late in the following century it was converted into a farmsteading by the removal of the early courtyard buildings, except the tower house, and the erection of lean-to sheds and offices against both sides of the curtain wall. These farm buildings were removed in 1898, and steps taken to preserve all that remained of the castle.
RCAHMS 1971
As described.
Earthwork resurveyed at 25".
Visited by OS (IA) 9 August 1973
Prior to consolidating the foundations of the NE tower, a narrow trench was excavated at right angles to the wall on each of the E, N and W sides. All three disclosed an extensive platform of level gravel on which the foundations had been laid. Some sherds of pottery dating from the early 13th century to mid-16th century were found.
A M Kahane 1975
The roof of the tower and the cape house have been re-slated and work is proceeding on the consolidation of the rest of the monument.
CBA Annual Report 1975-6
NR 9080 5778. As described and planned by the RCAHMS.
Surveyed at 1:10,000.
Visited by OS (TRG) 22 February 1977
An extensive geophysical survey was completed on this site, intended to characterise the main structural sequence in advance of development.
A total of four areas were subsequently excavated in the light of the geophysical survey and demonstrated that:
1. The castle sits on an artifically extended natural gravel terrace - one of a series of raised beach deposits.
2. The present contours and limits of the castle mound have been extensively reworked as part of the policies of the neighbouring Skipness House.
3. There was evidence that the castle mound was extended and complemented by a shallow ditch, probably reflecting the general refurbishment of the site in the later 13th century.
4. 19th and 20th century occupation of the tower house saw the almost total clearance of redundant courtyard structures.
5. Robbed wall lines were traceable in the form of foundation pads rather than trenches, cut against the bedding for a cobbled surface in the courtyard.
6. The main cause of the present flooding on the site appeared to be the use of rolled turf as a courtyard surface, and a possibly ruptured water main located to the N of the castle.
Sponsor: Historic Scotland
G Ewart 1993
A watching brief was carried out by Kirkdale Archaeology at Skipness Castle in October 1995, in advance of the digging of drainage channels within the courtyard. Four narrow trenches were opened, revealing 18th-century metalled pathways and a possible 13th-century drainage ditch. Elements of the gravel platform upon which the castle was originally constructed were also encountered.
Sponsor: Historic Scotland
G Ewart and P Sharman 1996
NR 9080 5777 A watching brief recorded the cutting of a short service trench in the NE corner of the Guardianship area in August 1998. The trench indicated a depth above which the ground in the immediate area could be disturbed, if necessary, without damaging anything of archaeological importance.
The main deposit in the trench was obviously modern, indicative of levelling and destruction. It was likely to be the result of the demolition and clearance of post-medieval farm outbuildings.
Sponsor: Historic Scotland
P Sharman 1998