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Kirk Holm

Monastic Settlement (Early Medieval)(Possible)

Site Name Kirk Holm

Classification Monastic Settlement (Early Medieval)(Possible)

Alternative Name(s) Sand

Canmore ID 706

Site Number HU34NW 6

NGR HU 33783 46047

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/706

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

  • Council Shetland Islands
  • Parish Sandsting
  • Former Region Shetland Islands Area
  • Former District Shetland
  • Former County Shetland

Archaeology Notes

HU34NW 6 3377 4606.

(HU 3377 4606) Ruins (LB)

OS 6" map, Shetland, 2nd ed. (1903)

The buildings are alleged to have been erected by survivors from the Spanish Armada in 1588.

Name Book 1878; New Statistical Account (NSA) 1845

The foundation mounds of eight or nine structures, oblong in shape, but having rounded corners. Six lie close together so near the edge of the cliff on the east side of the island that the ends of some of them have disappeared through erosion. Each has been about 40' long by 18' 6" broad. Although no stonework is visible, they suggest the foundations of houses.

RCAHMS 1946, visited 1931

The footings of eight buildings generally as described by RCAHMS. They vary in size from 13.5m long by 4.7m wide to 10.0m long by 3.9m wide with turf covered walls 1.0m average thickness. The entrances are all in the N sides. The remains of another house, now mostly destroyed by cliff erosion, are attached to the northerly end of the most northerly house. Tradition of shipwreck still known locally.

The houses are similar to the medieval settlement on the Brough of Birsay (Orkney), although the name of the island Kirk Holm suggests a religious establishment.

Visited by OS (RL) 11 June 1968

(Scheduled as Kirk Holm, monastic settlement). The monument consists of the remains of a settlement, almost

certainly a monastic establishment of early medieval date, located on the E side of the small islet called Kirk Holm.

It consists of the foundations of eight rectangular structures, each having rounded corners. They vary from 13.5m by 4.7m overall down to 10.0m by 3.9m. Their walls are about 1m wide and turf-covered. Six of the houses lie close together and are aligned NNE-SSW, with entrances towards the sea. A further house, severely eroded, lies just to the N, and another some 40m beyond this. The two last-mentioned have been subject to erosion, as have the seaward ends of the group of six. There are no visible traces of any associated structures or boundaries. The location, nature of the remains and the placename suggest an ecclesiastical origin, presumably as an eremitical establishment. The likely date would be 11th or 12th century AD, on analogy with other monastic settlements in Shetland and beyond.

Information from Historic Scotland, scheduling document dated 22 February 1993.

Nine unroofed buildings annotated Ruins are depicted on the 1st edition of the OS 6-inch map (Orkney & Shetland (Shetland) 1882, sheet li). Three unroofed buildings are shown on the current edition of the OS 1:10000 map (1973).

Information from RCAHMS (SAH) 4 June 2001

Activities

Field Visit (22 June 1931)

Ruins, Kirk Holm.

On Kirk Holm, a precipitous island some 330 yds. long, lying immediately S. of Kirka Ness at the mouth of Seli Voe, are the foundation mounds of eight or nine structures, oblong in shape but having rounded corners. On the E. side there are six lying close together, so near the edge of the cliff that the ends of some of them have disappeared through erosion. Each has been about 40 ft. long by 18 ft. 6 in. broad. Although no stone-work is visible, they suggest the foundations of houses.

RCAHMS 1946, visited 22 June 1931.

Cf. Hibbert 1822, Description, p.454

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