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Field Visit

Date 19 March 1998

Event ID 817717

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/817717

NN90SW 55 9487 0496

This farmstead is situated on the leading edge of a grass-grown terrace above the N bank of the River Devon to the NE of the Frandy Fish Farm. It comprises the footings of three buildings, a kiln, and at least four enclosures. Two of the buildings (GDEV98 48, 49) have been incorporated into a sheepfold that is depicted on the 1st edition of the OS 6-inch map (Perthshire and Clackmannanshire 1866, sheet cxxvii), which had largely been removed by 1946 ( vertical aerial photograph RAF 106G/SCOT UK 120, frame no.3263, 20 June 1946), perhaps to provide stone for another sheepfold to the W ( NN90SW 56, NN 9475 0491).

The largest of the buildings (GDEV98 48) measures 12.7m from NE to SW by 3m transversely within robbed stone footings spread to 1.1m in thickness and 0.3m in height; its SW corner has been removed by the construction of the road to the Glendevon Reservoirs. The interior has been divided into two compartments and there is an entrance in the SE side. The other buildings lie to the SE (GDEV98 49, 50) and SW (NN 9484 0591), the latter situated within a small rectangular enclosure around a midden hollow. The kiln bowl (GDEV98 50) is levelled into a natural slope to the E of the buildings and measures 3.1m in diameter.

To the SW of the farmstead, at NN 9484 0491, there are the disturbed footings of a further building with a midden hollow on its NE side. At least three further small enclosures lie beside the building.

The field-system extends across a well-drained, grass-grown spur between the River Devon and the Meadow Burn and comprises four subrectangular turf-banked fields. There are high-backed rigs, measuring about 5m between furrows, in the interior of the northern fields, and flatter rig of similar width in the other fields. Local successions of construction can be seen throughout the field-system. These, together with two short lengths of field-bank that have been truncated by rig, show that the pattern of fields visible today is a result of multiple phases of cultivation and enclosure. The W side of the westernmost field overlies a substantial field-bank, which cuts across the spur from the edge of the terrace beside the farmstead to the Meadow Burn, and may be an earlier head-dyke.

(GDEV98 48-50)

Visited by RCAHMS (DCC), 19 March 1998.

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References