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Balluig North

Enclosure (Period Unassigned), Kiln (Period Unassigned), Township (Period Unassigned)

Site Name Balluig North

Classification Enclosure (Period Unassigned), Kiln (Period Unassigned), Township (Period Unassigned)

Canmore ID 312512

Site Number NJ13SE 55

NGR NJ 18443 33931

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/312512

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

  • Council Moray
  • Parish Inveravon
  • Former Region Grampian
  • Former District Moray
  • Former County Banffshire

Activities

Field Visit (August 2007 - August 2010)

Site visits taking measurements and photographs.

This township occupies a grassy, boulder-strewn clearing in natural woodland at 220mOD. The site, bounded on the W by a small burn and on the E by the Lagmore-Chapelton road, is swathed in bracken during the summer. It comprises at least seven buildings, a kiln and a large, irregular enclosure.

The dominant feature is an enclosure of irregular shape, surrounded by a dry-stone wall 1.2m thick at the base and standing up to 0.9m high. The wall becomes a revetment on the E side, creating a flat and level interior. The entrance is at the NW, where there is a secondary enclosure bounded by a wall of boulders and turf, with a striking rounded boulder at the N corner. A probable outer enclosure to the E of the main enclosure is marked by boulders and faint traces of turf wall.

The buildings survive as low turf-and-boulder footings whose poor state of preservation prevents the identification of openings and other features. Buildings 1, 2 and 3 on the N side of the settlement are partly scooped into the slope of the ground and each has a clearly-defined drainage ditch on the uphill (W) side. There is a possible midden pit SE of Building 1. Three more buildings (4, 5 and 6), and faint, partial traces of a probable further building (7) lie to the S. In Building 4 there is a notable slab, presumably a hearth-back, set against the inner face of the N wall. Two small enclosures, defined by walls of substantial boulders and turf, lie between Buildings 4 and 5, and to the E of building 4. The E enclosure has a conspicuous flat stone lying within it.

A kiln is inserted into the lip of the slope above the burn on the NW margin of the site.

A sunken track leads downhill from the NE boundary of the settlement, to join the Lagmore-Chapelton road. Beyond the modern road is a level terrace that may have been arable land belonging to the settlement. This cultivable land is bounded at the W (below the road) by an irregular straggling wall of large boulders.

The settlement is not recorded on the 1st Edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map (Banffshire, surveyed 1869, published 1872, sheet xxix), but William Roy’s Military Survey of Scotland, 1747 -1755, shows an unnamed settlement at approximately this location. Two unroofed buildings and two enclosures are shown on the modern OS map.

Information from SRP Strath Avon Survey, August 2011.

References

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