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An Dun, Loch A' Chairn Bhain
Broch (Iron Age)(Possible)
Site Name An Dun, Loch A' Chairn Bhain
Classification Broch (Iron Age)(Possible)
Alternative Name(s) Kylestrome
Canmore ID 4671
Site Number NC23SW 1
NGR NC 2170 3411
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/4671
- Council Highland
- Parish Eddrachillis
- Former Region Highland
- Former District Sutherland
- Former County Sutherland
NC23SW 1 2170 3411.
(NC 2170 3411) An Dun (NAT) Broch (NR)
OS 6"map, (1967)
Broch, An Dun, Loch a' Chairn Bhain, Kylesku: This ruin stands towards the end of a rocky promontory or islet, connected with the shore by a causeway about 70' long, 10' wide and 2' high, formed of boulders. It is only separated from the mainland at high tides. The rock projects into Loch a' Chairn Bhain, near its S end, for a distance of about 100 yds. The structure on the end of it is circular, with an interior diameter of 28'6" or there- about. The thickness of the wall is some 12', except that on the NE, where in order to cover an approach between two rocks, it widens to 14' or 15'. The height of the wall to the outside is covered by debris, but inside where highest on the S it is 7' high, and except toward the N, several feet in height all round. The entrance has been from the SE and is 3' wide at the only point observable, which is between the two lowest stones on either side at the outer end. There are no signs visible of chambers in the thickness of the wall, nor any traces of a gallery. The edge of the rock about 20' from the broch appears to have been strengthened on the landward side with a wall.
RCAHMS 1911.
A mural gallery has been exposed by rubble removal on the NW side of the broch where the wall thickness exceeds 4m. It is 0.8m wide reached from the inner court by a stepped opening 0.75m wide, by which there is a side-chamber 2m by 1.4m. It continues E for 2m culminating in eight steps up to the present crown of the wall. The inner wall is 1.6m thick. On top of the wall, to SW, a later rectangular structure of heavy build, 5m by 2.6m, probably a dwelling was noted.
T C Welsh 1971.
for further details see MS/737/12
This is not a broch; it is a galleried dun.
The inner wall face can be seen without a break except in the SW where it is hidden by debris and a modern 'shelter' described by Welsh as a dwelling. The dun is a sub-circular measuring 9.7m NNW-SSE by 8.8m within a wall varying in thickness between 4.8m in the NNW and 3.7m in the SE. The outer face is straight in places. The debris-filled entrance passage, 4.8m long and 1.1m wide, runs obliquely through the wall in the WSW. A gallery, 0.8m wide, has been recently exposed in the N. There is a splayed aperture into it through the wall from the interior of the dun at a height of 0.7m above what appears to be the original floor level. From this aperture the gallery runs E for 1.4m to the base of a stairway ascending by eight steps to the present crown of the wall. W of the aperture, the gallery extends into what Welsh describes as a side chamber, but which is in fact a recent construction. In the floor of this construction a single horizontal slab 1.5m from the aperture may represent the foundation of the end of the gallery. There is no trace of any other intra-mural features. A small near circular steatite dish, 6cms in diameter and 2cms deep, was found at the beginning of August 1974 by Miss Fiona Chisholm, Kylestrome, and is still in her possession. It was found inverted on a stone at the side of the gallery stair. She also found a finger ring which she describes as being of "silver with punched decoration," but she lost it amongst the wall debris.
The outwork across the NE approach consists of a ruinous boulder-faced wall about 2.0m thick which incorporates several outcrops. It isolates a sub-rectangular area some 12.0m NW-SE by 10.0m NE-SW immediately outside the NE arc of the dun. No entrance is evident through it.
The causeway, with little doubt contemporary, averages 2.2m in width, and is faced with boulders on either side.
Surveyed at 1:10560. (OS {W D J} 21 April 1961.
Visited by OS (A A) 21 August 1974.
It is by no means certain that An Dun is not a broch. The large quantity of tumble both within and outside the structure would indicate a wall of considerable height commensurate with a broch, and the relative straightness of the wall faces in places may be due to deformation subsequent to its construction. This may also account for the lack of circularity of the enclosed area and the differential wall thickness; the breadth of the wall at the entrance can be measured at near ground level whereas elswhere measurements are taken at about first floor level. The size of the islet would restrict the size of any structure occupying it.
Though the wall construction where visible is somewhat 'lightweight', i.e. more typical of a dun, on balance this fortification is most likely to be a broch (cf NC13SE 1)
Visited by OS (N K B) 22 August 1980.
NC 217 341 Iron Age steatite bowl, 75mm in diameter and 32mm high, found casually inside the broch at An Dun (NC23SW 1) almost 30 years ago. It has recently been reported, and was claimed as Treasure Trove (TT 59/01) and allocated to Inverness Museum.
F Hunter 2002
Publication Account (2007)
NC23 1 KYLESTROME ('An Dun 6' NC/2170 3411
Probable solid-based broch (the diagnosis of the site in 1974 [1] as a “galleried dun” was presumably because the building then seemed to be sub-circular inside) in Eddrachillis, Sutherland, situated near the end of a rocky promontory or islet in the large sea loch Loch a' Chairn Bhain; the site is connected to the shore by a causeway made of boulders about 21m (70ft) long, 3m (10ft) wide and 60cm (2ft) high. The islet is now only cut off at high tide (visited 30/6/88).
The building has been partly cleared out and some crude restoration of the wallfaces has been attempted. It is circular, the internal diameter being measured originally at 8.69m (28ft 6in); in 1988 a fresh survey revealed that the central court has a radius of 4.57 +/- 0.25m, giving a diameter of 9.14m. The standard deviation is unusually large for a broch and may mean that the central court was not in fact set out with a peg-and-string compass, like so many others were. On the other hand the circularity of the wall may have become distorted at the high point at which the measurements had to be taken. The surrounding wall is about 3.6m (12ft) thick, but is wider on the north-east –4.27m-4.58m (14-15ft). The outer face can be traced in several places and in 1909 the inner was said to be several feet high all round and to rise to 2.1m (7ft) on the south [2]; now it is only about 1.2m (4ft) and is visible only for about half of the circumference. The entrance was reported to be on the south-east but the author's compass revealed it to be on the west, facing down the loch to the sea; it is 4.8m long and 1.1m wide [1].
The blocks forming the inner and outer ends of the right side are visible, as is part of the left wall. No door-frame can be seen at present. The entrance faces and is immediately above the steep rocky shore of the promontory. By 1971 part of an intra-mural gallery had been exposed on the north side, with a suggestion of a doorway leading into it; eight steps of the stair can be seen clockwise from this doorway ascending to the wallhead [1]. By 1988 the stair doorway had been skilfully blocked up and its sides are not easy to trace. There is a stair-foot guard cell to its left and in view of this, and of the absence of any signs of other doorways into the wall, the site is probably a solid-based broch.
Finds: a small near-circular steatite dish was found on the site in 1974 [1] together with a silver finger ring, but the latter was lost.
Sources: 1. NMRS site no. NC 23 SW 1: 2. RCAHMS 1911a, no. 168, 56: 3. T C Welsh in Discovery and Excavation Scotland 1971, 47: 4. Close-Brooks 1995, 134: 5. F Hunter in Discovery and Excavation Scotland 2002, 68.
E W MacKie 2007 c
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