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Field Visit
Date 17 August 1956
Event ID 920369
Category Recording
Type Field Visit
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/920369
Fort, Little Conval
Little Conval Hill, which rises to a height of 1,810 ft. O. D., stands at a distance of two miles WSW of Dufftown and four miles S. of the junction of Glen Fiddich and Strathspey at Craigellachie. The N. flank of the hill falls gently to the moors NW. of Duff town, but the other flanks are considerably steeper , the S one falling 550 feet to the col leading to Meikle Conval and the other two descending for 1,000 ft. before reaching the limits of the cultivated lands below.
The summit of the hill, a comparatively flat area measuring about 700 ft. from N. to S. by about 400 ft. transversely was chosen for the site of a fort the construction of which was not completed. Two main and two subsidiary lines of defence can be distinguished. The inner, which encloses an area measuring 680 ft. in length by 400 ft. in breadth, consists for the most part of a line of boulders spread over a width of about 10 ft.; but for a distance of 400 ft. in the N. and NE. arcs this ceases altogether, and the line is only indicated by a marker trench. This can be traced through the heather and peat along the whole of the space between the ends of the line of boulders in the form of a shallow excavation of irregular width the mean of which is about 5 ft. , and along the inner lip of which is a very slight upcast mound. There is no visible indication that the boulders had ever been built into a regular wall with outer and inner faces, but the lowest courses of such features, had they existed , would probably have been buried in the debris. The only entrance is a gap about 10 ft. wide in the SW arc.
At a distance varying from as little as 12 ft. to as much as 48 ft. outside the inner defence is a line consisting entirely of stretches of marker trench. This could not be detected in the deep heather on the steep W. flank of the hill, although it is apparent as a dark line on aerial photographs. The first point at which it could be seen on the date of visit was at a point distance 26 feet from the WSW. arc of the inner defence. It runs thence S. for 90 ft. to one side of a gap 35 ft. wide which covers the entrance in the inner defence. Thereafter, it continues to follow the S. and SE flanks of the latter, interrupted by a gap of only 15 ft. in the E. arc. At a point 175 ft. N of this there is a pronounced kink in the course of the trench which thereafter continues round the N. arc to be lost again on the steep W. slope of the h ill. This marker trench, like the section already described, is shallow and of irregular width and depth, possibly as the result of several separate gangs having worked on its construction. For most of its course this trench has a very slight heap of small stone sand earth outside it.
While the lay-out of these two embryo lines of defence is unexceptionable, that of the next to be described is less regular. It starts on the steep W slope of the hill at a point 75 ft. outside the second marker trench and 95 ft. outside the rubble of the innermost line in the form of a marker trench similar to the others varying from 6 inches to one ft. in depth and f r om 2 ft. to 4 ft. in width and showing traces of gang work. It runs thence E and SE for a distance of about 600 ft., thus forming the basis of a third line to cover the weakest approach to the summit of the hill. Thereafter, however, it immediately becomes a wall 6 ft. in thickness, with facing stones on either side including some measuring about 6 ft. in length, 2 ft. 6 inches in thickness and one ft. in depth, apparently quarried but not dressed, and also large gathered boulder s of comparable size. The filling is of smaller stones. This wall continues S. along the steepening E. flank of the hill, and after making a salient to the E. finishes abruptly on the SE flank of the hill, at a point distant 200 ft. from the second line described above. No trace of wall or marker trench exists beyond this point, but this part of the hillside bears numerous apparently ancient stone field boundaries, and it is possible that the abrupt ending of the remainder of the wall and the lack of any further work beyond this may be related to their presence. It is, however, difficult to account for the presence of the salient.
A fourth line of defence occurs on the gentle N slope at a distance varying from 30 ft. to 60 ft. outside the marker trench which forms the N. arc of the third line. It consists of a slight low bank about 4 ft. in width and 330 ft. in length.
The interior of the fort is covered in peat and heather, and cloudberries grow in profusion in the NE. part. There are no traces of internal structures.
295393 xxiv SE (‘Camp’)
Visited by RCAHMS, 17 August 1956