Quarterside Of Lipney
Enclosure(S) (Post Medieval), Field System (Post Medieval), Head Dyke (Post Medieval), Rig And Furrow (Post Medieval)
Site Name Quarterside Of Lipney
Classification Enclosure(S) (Post Medieval), Field System (Post Medieval), Head Dyke (Post Medieval), Rig And Furrow (Post Medieval)
Alternative Name(s) Dumyat
Canmore ID 145081
Site Number NS89NW 80.01
NGR NS 8425 9782
NGR Description Centred on NS 8425 9782
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/145081
- Council Stirling
- Parish Logie (Stirling)
- Former Region Central
- Former District Stirling
- Former County Stirlingshire
Field Visit (20 May 1997)
NS89NW 80.01 centred on 8425 9782
A field-system of two distinct phases occupies the ground to the N of an unnamed tributary of the Menstrie Burn. A substantial earth and stone head-dyke runs approximately N to S along the W side of the field-systems. This may be the feature referred to as the old head-dyke in a tack of 1740 (Tack to Andrew Roy of Foreside and Quarterside, SRO, RH 15/115/1/2 bundle G). The S end of the head-dyke lies at a cliff top (NS 8419 9750), while to the N it swings round to the E (NS 8418 9792) and stops just short of a head-dyke (NS 8440 9789) which extends along the valley side to the NE (NS89NW 83.03 ). The N side of the head-dyke overlies a fragmentary network of fields (NS 832 978). The S edge of this earlier field-system is overlain by a second field-system which, at its W edge, also overlies the head-dyke. The E side of the latest field-system has been truncated by more recent cultivation.
Extensive swathes of unenclosed rig form discrete blocks according to the topography to the S of the burn and E of the head-dyke. Within this area there are three enclosures of greatly differing sizes. The smallest (NS 8442 9757; about 13m by 8m) lies immediately to the N of an enclosure measuring about 80m by 45m and containing rig. The third enclosure (NS 8458 9750) which measures about 140m by 90m is bounded by a ruinous drystone wall and does not appear to contain any rig. It may be a stock enclosure or plantation bank dating to relatively late in the sequence of landuse on the hill.
Visited by RCAHMS (DCC) 20 May 1997
