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Creagan A' Bheannaich, 'chapel And Graveyard'
Chapel (Early Medieval)(Possible), Mound (Bronze Age)
Site Name Creagan A' Bheannaich, 'chapel And Graveyard'
Classification Chapel (Early Medieval)(Possible), Mound (Bronze Age)
Alternative Name(s) Sandside House
Canmore ID 7739
Site Number ND05NW 9
NGR ND 0408 5783
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/7739
- Council Highland
- Parish Reay
- Former Region Highland
- Former District Caithness
- Former County Caithness
Field Visit (11 April 1961)
This is an oval grass-covered stony mound measuring 17m NW-SE by 14m transversely and 0.5m high. There are upright stones on the E, S and W sides, but other than these there is nothing to indicate that a chapel and graveyard existed in the area; and the site strongly resembles the remains of a cairn being comparable with sites ND05NW 6, 7 and 11.
Visited by OS (E G C), 11 April 1961.
Desk Based Assessment (27 August 1978)
ND05NW 9 0408 5783
(ND 0408 5783) Creagan a' Bheannaich (NR)
OS 6" map, (1963)
'A round low hillock covered with stones, the remains of a chapel and graveyard. No one of the present age has seen anyone interred here, but some of them can point out two or three graves with rough flat stones over them shown to them by there forefathers. There is nothing of the chapel to be seen except a few large scattered stones. To whom it has been dedicated is not known unless, as some say, there has been a saint of the name of Bheannaich. A large stone which stood on end somewhere near this place was broken down for building purposes. Part of it is still to be seen in a wall near Tigh a Bheannaich ('House of the Blessing': ND 040 577). Cut on that part of this stone which is in sight, is a cross and a small circle. Besides this there was an inscription on it, written in Hebrew, but that is not anywhere to be seen.'
OS Name Book 1873.
In Shurrery there is a chapel 'called Rheanauchan which seems to be St Benedict's, and it is observable about the place that the highland people have a great many expressions which seem to be Latin.'
T Pennant 1774; W Macfarlane 1906-8.
Apparently the remains of a very early church, with associated structures, on a turf-covered mound. The mound is about 5ft high, strewn with earthfast boulders, some massive, and a few orthostats. The possible church surmounts the mound and measures 22ft N-S by 17ft E-W, and has rounded corners and walls about 2ft thick which are new merely turf-covered footings of large boulders. There is a possible entrance east of the centre of the south wall. There are earthfast boulders all over the interior, and at the north end is a heap of stones and boulders which is possibly an altar platform, though it is not against the wall. There are indications of other small structures on the mound.
W Macfarlane (1906-8) version of the name 'Rheanauchan' should be 'Bheanauchan' from 'Beannachd', 'benediction' or 'blessing', and the assumption of a dedication to St Benedict presumably derives from this, and so has no real authority.
A S MacDonald and L R Laing 1969.
Information from OS (ES) 27 August 1978
Field Visit (16 December 1981)
There is strong evidence for a church or chapel in this position based on the name Creagan a' Bheannaich (verified), the discovery of a cross-slab, the local tradition of a chapel and graveyard, and the turf-covered footings of the building itself, which is as described and planned by the RCAHMS, although there are possible traces of a turf-covered wall extending 3.0 to 4.0m further S. However, the alleged graveyard is a distinct stony mound, as described by OS field surveyor (E G C), and closely resembles Carn Liath (ND05NW 7) and other mounds in the Shurrery area (cf ND05NW 11, 12), which may be pre-Christian homesteads. These mounds demonstrate upright slabs protruding through the turf in no recognisable pattern, and appear to be random exposures of the mound content; Creagan a' Bheannaich has four such orthostats which may have been thought to be grave-markers.
It is possible that a church or chapel was erected on an existing prehistoric mound; the quantity of stone in the mound is not commensurate with tumble from a building. Alternatively, the local tradition of a chapel and grave-yard may have developed from the false assumption that the exposed slabs are grave-markers. The remains of the building and mound are too indistinct to enable positive classification.
Visited by OS (N K B), 16 December 1981.
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