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Rousay, North House

Farmstead (Post Medieval), Kiln Barn (Post Medieval)

Site Name Rousay, North House

Classification Farmstead (Post Medieval), Kiln Barn (Post Medieval)

Canmore ID 182029

Site Number HY33SE 49

NGR HY 3734 3320

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/182029

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Administrative Areas

  • Council Orkney Islands
  • Parish Rousay And Egilsay
  • Former Region Orkney Islands Area
  • Former District Orkney
  • Former County Orkney

Archaeology Notes

HY33SE 49 3734 3320

A farmstead comprising two unroofed buildings, two enclosures and one unroofed structure lying approximately 160m to the SSW, and a head-dyke are depicted on the 1st edition of the OS 6-inch map (Orkney and Shetland (Orkney) 1882, sheet lxxxiv). The head-dyke is conjoined to that of the farmstead of Lower Breck (HY33SE 52) to the S.

Two enclosures and the fragmentary remains of the head-dyke are shown on the current edition of the OS 1:10000 map (1977).

Information from RCAHMS (SAH) 11 December 2000

Activities

Field Visit (14 May 2015)

This farmstead, which comprises two parallel ranges set up-and-down the slope, is situated on the western flank of the Brae of Moan at the northern edge of a group of smallholdings on the eastern side of the Quendal valley. The NNW range measures 15.4m ENE to WSW by 4.5m transversely over ruinous drystone walls up to 0.7m in thickness. It contains three compartments, the central one probably being the original dwelling, with a doorway and a wall-niche on the SSE. Both the other compartments appear to be additions. That at the ENE end is narrower that the central compartment to which it is linked by a common doorway, but it also has a doorway in its SSE side. A later wall has been constructed in the interior to create a small roofed hut. The ESE range, separated from the other by a passageway only 1.2m in width, measures about 12.6m by 3.7m over walls up to 0.7m in thickness. It comprises two compartments, each with an entrance leading into the passage and that at the ENE end being a kiln-barn. The kiln pot is located in the rounded ENE gable of the range together with a small grain store and what is possible a quern ledder (recess in which a quern was stored). There is also a winnowing hole in the ESE wall of the barn. The buildings sit within the S side of a rectangular stone-walled enclosure measuring 68m from ENE to WSW by 25m transversely and enclosing an area 0.5 of an acre (0.2ha) in extent.

Thompson notes (1981, 46) that North House was reduced to a holding of only 0.5 acre in the 1840s and was cleared in 1845. The farmstead is depicted unroofed on the 1st edition of the OS 25-inch map (Orkney 1882, Sheet LXXXIV.12) and a contemporary account states that the name applied to ‘a ruin’ (Name Book 16, 12).

Visited by RCAHMS (GFG, KN) 14 May 2015

Surveyed at 1:200

Measured Survey (14 May 2015)

RCAHMS surveyed North House farmstead with plane-table and alidade on 14 May 2015 at a scale of 1:200. The resultant plan was redrawn in vector graphics software.

Excavation (11 May 2015 - 16 July 2015)

HY 3758 3264 (Breck), HY 37384 30093 (Skaill) and HY 37289 30396 (Brough) Archaeological investigations into the Rousay clearances took place at two sites, c2.5 km apart, in the W of Rousay, 11 May – 16 July 2015. Excavation was undertaken at Breck Farmstead in Quandale in conjunction with measured and landscape survey by RCAHMS of the neighbouring farmsteads. In addition, a building recording survey was undertaken and a test pit excavated at Skaill Farm, Westness. Geophysical survey (magnetometry) was also undertaken at Skaill and nearby Brough Farm. The project was in partnership with the ongoing excavations at Swandro multi-period settlement and tombs (University of Bradford), and investigation of the multi-period landscapes of the island.

At Breck (11–22 May 2015), eight small keyhole trenches were excavated within the farm buildings and four test pits around the nearby enclosure. Breck consisted of two building ranges separated by a close (but and ben with additional room, and corn kiln, barn and byre). The earth floor in the but end had been replaced and the remains of a leather shoe was found buried in the upper floor layer. In a similar manner, the original central hearth slab in the but end had been overlain by another slab which also had a rough back wall. A ‘Z’ motif had been carved into the SW end of the lower hearth slab and may have been a good luck charm. The hearth appears to have been replaced along with the floor. Paving slabs and stone roof slabs were found in the close. The presence of window glass suggests that the stone roof had small skylights. The corn drying kiln had a flue into the barn, both had been swept clean. A dump of pottery was found in the neuk bed and byre drain. Indications are that the farm was built in the late 18th to early 19th century as an outset into the hill land beyond the hill dyke. A team from RCAHMS led by George Geddes prepared notes on 68 sites within the Quandale area, and produced measured surveys of seven farmsteads (North House HY33SE 49, Hestival HY33SE 51, Breek HY33SE 53, Cairn HY33SE 55, Knapknowes HY33SE 60).

At Skaill Farm, measured building survey was undertaken at the two ranges and corn kiln. Geophysical survey (magnetometer) was undertaken in four blocks around the farmstead and also a single block at Brough Farm. The results from Skaill indicated the presence of earlier boundaries on a different alignment to the present post-medieval boundaries, which may relate to an earlier farm.

A small test pit was excavated in the garden area adjacent to the main farmhouse to investigate potential post-medieval midden for animal bone assemblages (8–9 and 14–15 July 2015). Midden enhanced topsoil (containing pottery, animal bone, glass and a 1743 half penny) sealed a stony demolition layer (containing fish bones and a sherd of steatite) which in turn sealed a stone wall. The wall was on a slightly different alignment to the main farm building and is likely to relate to an earlier structure and the other geophysical anomalies. The steatite suggests that the earlier farm could date to the

Viking period.

Archive: Archaeology Institute, UHI

Funder: Orkney Islands Council, Orkney Archaeology Society and Archaeology Institute, UHI

Daniel Lee, Keir Strickland, Jane Downes, Ingrid Mainland and George Geddes – Archaeology Institute, UHI and HES

(Source: DES, Volume 16)

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