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Sanday, Cross Parish Church

Church (17th Century) - (18th Century), Midden (Prehistoric) - (Norse), Settlement (Prehistoric) - (Norse)(Possible)

Site Name Sanday, Cross Parish Church

Classification Church (17th Century) - (18th Century), Midden (Prehistoric) - (Norse), Settlement (Prehistoric) - (Norse)(Possible)

Canmore ID 3412

Site Number HY63NE 8

NGR HY 65366 39207

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/3412

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

  • Council Orkney Islands
  • Parish Cross And Burness
  • Former Region Orkney Islands Area
  • Former District Orkney
  • Former County Orkney

Archaeology Notes

HY63NE 8 6537 3920.

(HY 6537 3920) Church (In Ruins) (NAT)

OS 6"map, Orkney, 2nd ed.,(1900).

The ruins of the former church of Cross parish, built on a site formerly occupied by a prehistoric structure.

The building which may date from the late 17th or early 18th centuries measures externally 60' 6" by 22' with walls about 2'9" in thickness the north wall being almost entirely destroyed. The others show that it has been plastered inside and harled outside.

The graveyard was still in use in 1879.

The nature of the prehistoric site is uncertain, but kitchen-midden deposits containing fragments of rude pottery are clearly visible along the face of the bank above the beach on the south side of the church-yard.

RCAHMS 1946, visited 1928; Name Book 1879.

The church is as described and planned by the RCAHMS, and the graveyard is still in use.

According to Mr J D MacKay, the School-house, Sanday there was a pre-Reformation Chapel here dedicated to the Holy Cross, but there is now no trace. Possibly the present 17/18th century ruins incorporate fragments of the earlier church.

A fragment of dry-stone walling and a few limpet shells exposed in the cliff face at HY 6540 3915 are all that remain of the prehistoric structure.

Visited by OS(NKB) 9 July 1970.

Activities

Note (1980)

Cross, Old Kirk, Sanday HY 6537 3920 HY63NE 8

Ruined church, probably seventeenth-century in date, on old foundations. Emerging under churchyard wall on W side are earthworks, possibly an older enclosure or perhaps associated with an extensive settlement indicated by midden material and masonry in the eroding shore-section. Site a likely one for a high-status Norse settlement. Curious sixteenth-century report of an older cemetery containing outsize skeletons, which had been uncovered by wind-erosion. Sea erosion is active.

RCAHMS 1980

(Jo Ben in Barry 1805, 434-5; Stat Acct, vii, 1793, 489; RCAHMS 1946, ii, p. 40, No. 157; p. 43, No. 175; OR 135)

Field Visit (1999)

The ruins of the disused Cross parish church and cemetery lie adjacent to the coast edge, to the east side of Backaskail Bay. The building, which measures some 21m in length by 7m in width, is thought to date to the late 17th or early 18th C. This church is said to have been built on the foundations of a pre-reformation chapel, dedicated to the Holy Cross. A 16th C account mentions an earlier cemetery with outsize skeletons' being uncovered by erosion. Previous surveyors have noted the presence of midden deposits and drystone walling in the coastal section as indicative of an early settlement. It has been suggested that the site may be of prehistoric date and that the location is also a likely one for a high status Norse settlement. The coastal section is protected by a sea wall which has been recently renewed and no eroding deposits were noted on this visit. There is a mounded area which extends from the eastern side of the cemetery which may represent archaeological remains, covered beneath a thick layer of blown sand. The mound measures some 40m in diameter and stands up to 2m high. Earthworks, previously noted at the west side of the cemetery, have been tentatively identified as the remains of an early church enclosure or part of an earlier settlement. Ref.: RCAHMS (1946) #157; RCAHMS (1980) #174.

Coastal Zone Assessment Survey, 1999

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