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Harehope

Cairn (Period Unassigned), Button(S) (Shale)

Site Name Harehope

Classification Cairn (Period Unassigned), Button(S) (Shale)

Canmore ID 51562

Site Number NT24SW 44

NGR NT 2138 4350

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

C14 Radiocarbon Dating

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/51562

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

  • Council Scottish Borders, The
  • Parish Eddleston
  • Former Region Borders
  • Former District Tweeddale
  • Former County Peebles-shire

Archaeology Notes

NT24SW 44 2138 4350.

NT 214 435: Cairn: Harehope. This cairn stands on the SE edge of an old coach road from Edinburgh to Moffat. Practically all the cairn material has been robbed, and only a low turf-covered spread of stones now survives, measuring 70' in diameter and not more than one foot in height. A number of boulders protruding through the turf around the perimeter appear to belong to an original kerb. In the SE quadrant of the interior the tops of seven earthfast slabs can be seen, forming the outline of a cist-like structure about 8' in length and 3' in width. The NW quadrant contains a large boulder measuring 4' by 4' and standing 2' above the ground.

Contiguous with the outer edge of the cairn on the W and SW respectively there are two circular stony mounds, each measuring 15' in diameter and one foot in height, and 8' to the NE there is a third mound which measures 18' in diameter and 1' 6" in height. In the absence of excavation the purpose of these mounds is unknown, but their close proximity to the cairn suggests that they may be associated with it. (Information from A McLaren notebook 2, 84)

RCAHMS 1967, visited 1963

NT 2138 4350: The remains of a possible robbed cairn 19.0m in diameter arising as an earth and stone bank 1.0m wide and 0.3m high. The large boulder within the interior is typical of many that are lying on the immediate hillsides and is probably of no significance. It is possible that a sheepfold was constructed on the remains, as the surrounding rim does not have the mutilated appearance associated with robbed cairns.

Visited by OS (JLD) 14 May 1962 and (BS) 25 October 1974

The denuded remains of Harehope Cairn were excavated, along with Green Knowe unenclosed platform settlement (NT24SW 16), during 1977 and 1978 by George Jobey.

Because of its location, close to the Edinburgh to Moffat coach road, the cairn had suffered from severe stone robbing. Despite the extensive damage, two structural phases were discerned.

The perimeter of an inner cairn was observed, measuring 12.5m and defined by a kerb of roughly shaped stones. Only seven of these stones were extant, the rest being indicated by shallow stone sockets in the old ground surface. The second phase of activity related to the enlargement of the cairn in antiquity with the addition of an outer kerb, which would have expanded the diameter of the cairn to around 19m. The cairn material itself had been almost completely robbed down to the subsoil.

Beneath the cairn, four inhumations and seven cremation burials were excavated. One of the inhumations [A] (Jobey 1980, fig. 13) was accompanied by 32 V-bored conical shale buttons, a V-bored oval button, a shale belt fastener ['pulley-ring'] and a flint knife. A second inhumation [B] was furnished with a necklace of 127 lignite disc-beads. No skeletal remains were present.

A further cist burial [G] was accompanied by a complete beaker [Clarke's Developed North British type (N2, L) or Step 5] and a very large single sherd of a British/North Rhine (or Step 4) beaker. Further pottery, of European bell beaker type (all-over cord-impressed, Step 2), was recovered from different levels in the pit containing cist G. It is possible that the cist was a later insertion, which disturbed an earlier burial and dispersed the grave goods.

Information from Jobey 1980, 72-143

Several of the shale buttons from cist 'A' exhibit secondary decoration, executed some time after their original manufacture and discernable from their poor quality execution. This is especially clear on the largest example in the assemblage, which is one of the most impressive of its kind in Europe.

(see I. A. G. Shepherd in Clarke et al. 1985, p. 204-16)

RCAHMS (SO), July 2003

Activities

Management (23 February 2014 - 15 September 2016)

NT 21380 43500 (Canmore ID: 51562, SMR ID: 51562) Harehope Cairn was excavated in the 1970s and is situated near to the Moffat coach road. Presently, the cairn lies in commercial forestry which had begun to encroach on the monument. Adopt-a-Monument worked with the

Peeblesshire Archaeological Society, 23 February 2014 – 15 September 2016, to clear the monument remains for walkers and visitors using the old coach road. The heather and the self-seeded saplings within the area of the cairn were removed so that the features were easily visible again, but grass and moss was left in place so that the site would still appear as a field monument.

Archive and report: NRHE (intended)

Funder: HLF and HES

Phil Richardson and Maureen Erasmuson – Archaeology Scotland

(Source: DES, Volume 17)

Excavation (15 December 2016)

NT 21380 43500 Harehope Cairn was excavated in the 1970s

and is situated near to the Moffat coach road. Presently,

the cairn lies in commercial forestry which had begun to

encroach on the monument. Adopt-a-Monument has been

working with the Peeblesshire Archaeological Society from

2013–16, undertaking a programme of maintenance and

conservation work. This has involved clearing the remains of

heather and self-seeded saplings.

Two postholes for the supporting posts of a new

interpretation panel at the site were excavated and recorded,

15 December 2016. No finds or features of archaeological

interest were recorded in the 0.5 x 0.3m by 0.6m deep

postholes.

Archive: NRHE

Funder: HLF and HES

Héléna Gray – Archaeology Scotland

(Source: DES, Volume 19)

Sbc Note

Visibility: This is an upstanding earthwork or monument.

Information from Scottish Borders Council

References

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