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Berneray, Maclean's Point

Burial Ground (Medieval), Chapel (Medieval), Cross Slab (Early Medieval)

Site Name Berneray, Maclean's Point

Classification Burial Ground (Medieval), Chapel (Medieval), Cross Slab (Early Medieval)

Canmore ID 21369

Site Number NL58SE 3

NGR NL 5674 8029

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/21369

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
Canmore Disclaimer. © Bluesky International Limited 2024. Public Sector Viewing Terms

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Digital Images

Administrative Areas

  • Council Western Isles
  • Parish Barra
  • Former Region Western Isles Islands Area
  • Former District Western Isles
  • Former County Inverness-shire

Activities

Reference (1885)

Muir, in 1866, noted that the burial ground "is probably ancient, but no objects in it are of any age".

T S Muir 1885.

Field Visit (10 June 1915)

Chapel, Maclean's Point, Berneray.

Near Maclean's Point some 350 yards east by south of the landing jetty on the island of Berneray and about 50 yards from the shore in an old burying ground is the site of a church, all traces of which have disappeared.

CROSS SLAB. Set up at the head of a grave is a small slab of gneiss, 22 inches high and 13 inches broad, with a small cross, 10 inches long and 4¼ inches broad, incised on one face. The upper arm and the shaft of the cross are terminated ‘potent’. (Fig. 176.)

RCAHMS 1928, visited 10 June 1915.

OS map: Barra lxx.

Field Visit (18 May 1965)

There are no certain traces of a chapel and burial ground at the published site which is obscured by a drystone enclosure, divided into two parts of a wall, on the E side of which are the footings of several buildings varying in shape and size from 3.6m x 3.6m to 8.5m x 5.3m. There is no local knowledge concerning this site, and no further information could be obtained.

Visited by OS (R B) 18 May 1965.

Field Visit (1992)

BY55: An ovoid cemetery c. 35m along its axis, enclosed by a wall, and divided into two halves by a cross wall or bank. Burials are found in the eastern half, many of them dug into a large mound, c. 10m in diameter, apparently surfaces with (or made of) beach pebbles. The mound is also slighted by a 5m square building with thick walls built onto the dividing wall. A similar, slightly larger building abuts the wall to the S. This building is partly slighted by a subrectangular building, perhaps a chapel, 9.5m by 5m built into the main cemetery enclosure wall. A smaller sub-square building appears to have been subsequently inserted into the former building. Finally, two blackhouses were built over the cemetery wall on the W side. [See MSS for plan.]

P Foster 1992a; NMRS MSS 595/7, 595/8.

Reference (2001)

This island, the most southerly point of the Outer Hebrides, measures 2.9km from E to W by 1.25km. Its surface rises steadily from the shore of the Sound of Berneray to the sheer cliffs of the S coast, almost 200m in height, which at the W end are crowned by an Iron Age promontory dun (1) and by the Barra Head lighthouse of 1830-3. The scanty remains of another promontory fortification, Dun Briste, are situated on the NW coast, and numerous other monuments of early type have been identified in a recent survey (2). The remains of pre-improvement occupation include a small mill, and there was a farming population of about twenty persons throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. The island was abandoned, except for the lighthouse station, about 1910 (3).

It was believed in 1877 that there had been a chapel in the NE part of the island, and a small burial-ground was still in occasional use (4). This is the most level area of the island and contains the remains of several structures and enclosures. The burial-ground is situated about 100m S of the low promontory of Maclean's Point and 280m ESE of the landing-place. There are remains of an ovoid drystone enclosure, about 35m from E to W and divided by a transverse wall, which contains in the E part a low mound overlain by graves and later structures (5). The area is densely overgrown with wild iris, but several small gravemarkers are identifiable, including one cross-marked pillar.

The cross-marked stone is a tilted but earthfast slab of gneiss, 0.59m in visible height by 0.35m and 0.17m thick. On the W face there is a Latin cross, 0.25m high and 0.11m in span, incised with a sunken groove of U-section about 15mm wide. The shaft and top arm have triangular terminals whereas the side-arms have rounded ends.

Footnotes:

(1) RCAHMS 1928, No.450 and fig.190; B Buxton 1995, 139-40.

(2) P Foster 1992, 88; B Buxton 1995, 138-40; P Foster and R Krivanek 1993, 418-28 (copy in NMRS); survey reports by Sheffield University, Department of Archaeology and Prehistory, 1992 (copies in NMRS, MSS 595/7 and 8); K Branigan and P Foster 2000, 128-46.

(3) B Buxton 1995, 140-7.

(4) Name Book, Inverness-shire (Hebrides), No.2, p.131; T S Muir 1885, 255. NMRS database NL58SE 4 identifies Martin's description of an 'altar dedicated to St Christopher' and a nearby standing-stone (M Martin 1934, 97) as referring to Berneray. The context indicates that these were on Mingulay.

(5) P Foster and R Krivanek 1993, 426 and fig.9 on p.427; K Branigan and P Foster 2000, 137-8

(RCAHMS 1928, No.467 and fig.176).

I Fisher 2001, 105.

Note

NL58SE 3 5674 8029.

(NL 56748029) Chapel (NR) (Site of).

OS 6"map, Inverness-shire, 2nd ed., (1904)

References

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