Cnoc Achadh Na H-uaighe
Hut (Post Medieval), Hut Circle (Prehistoric), Souterrain (Prehistoric)
Site Name Cnoc Achadh Na H-uaighe
Classification Hut (Post Medieval), Hut Circle (Prehistoric), Souterrain (Prehistoric)
Canmore ID 122371
Site Number NC70NW 2.01
NGR NC 7166 0751
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/122371
- Council Highland
- Parish Rogart
- Former Region Highland
- Former District Sutherland
- Former County Sutherland
NC70NW 2.01 7166 0751
Near the centre of the group, on the upper side of the two tracks that run to West Langwell, is a hut circle with an entrance from the south-east. It measures internally 39 by 42ft. with a bank about 6ft thick. Just above the upper track and a short distance to the west of the last-mentioned hut are the dilapidated foundations of a more complicated structure. It comprises three compartments; a main oval one measuring 17 by 29 1/2ft into which the entrance opens from the south; and two apsidal compartments opening off it, one at the north and another towards the south-west,each measuring internally 16 by 14ft. The principal entrance is 2ft 8ins wide, through a passage 8ft long.
RCAHMS 1911, visited 1911.
On the W flank of Cnoc Achadh na h-Vaighe is a settlement of three hut circles (A-C) one (A) with a souterrain, and an accompanying well-preserved field system. The hut circle described by the RCAHMS is probably A, the most upstanding of the three huts, and the "complicated structure", is probably that at NC 7160 0755, described later.
Hut A, levelled into a slight change of slope and partially heather and turf-covered, measures 10.5m diameter within walling, 0.8m high and spread to 2.5m expanding to 3.5m in the sides of the entrance in the SE; the walling is distinguished by a fairly well-preserved inner face of large boulders, some up to 1.1m high. The hut interior contains an amount of turf-covered debris and also possible footings of a bothy-type structure 3.0 by 2.5m.
Extending radially from NW exterior of the hut and curving round to the W, is the collapsed line of a souterrain. It shows as a depression, 0.8 to 1.1m deep by 2.5 to 3.0m wide by some 12.0m long, with stone protruding in the turf-covered bottom particularly one lintel-type slab; opposing blocks in the sides of the depression near the hut end are 1.0m apart. The continuity of the depression is broken by two transverse ridges, possibly indicating lintel slabs remaining in situ.
Revised at 1:10,000.
Visited by OS (J M) 6 April 1981.
Field Visit (9 March 1995)
NC70NW 2.01 7166 0751
This hut-circle (OS 'A'), with its adjoining souterrain, is levelled into the slope on a small terrace. It measures 10m in diameter within a substantial boulder-faced bank 2.2m in thickness and 0.8m in height; the terminals of the bank have been expanded externally on either side of the entrance, which is on the SE. The souterrain, which is visible as an oval hollow, extends for 11.1m to the NW from within the hut-circle wall, and measures up to 3.3m across by 0.5m in depth. There is no break in the line of the inner face of the hut-circle bank where it is underlain by the souterrain, and the position of the entrance into the souterrain is not clear. There is a low upcast mound around the edge of the souterrain hollow, possibly produced as a result of stone robbing from the structure, suggesting that the walls, or roof, of the souterrain may, originally, have risen above the surface of the ground. There is a subrectangular hut in the interior of the hut-circle.
(ROG95 42)
Visited by RCAHMS (DCC) 9 March 1995
