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South Uist, Kilpheder, Bruthach An Tigh Tallan

Aisled Roundhouse (Iron Age)(Possible), Midden (Period Unassigned), Wheelhouse (Iron Age)(Possible), Pin (Bronze)

Site Name South Uist, Kilpheder, Bruthach An Tigh Tallan

Classification Aisled Roundhouse (Iron Age)(Possible), Midden (Period Unassigned), Wheelhouse (Iron Age)(Possible), Pin (Bronze)

Canmore ID 9862

Site Number NF72SW 3

NGR NF 734 207

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/9862

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

  • Council Western Isles
  • Parish South Uist
  • Former Region Western Isles Islands Area
  • Former District Western Isles
  • Former County Inverness-shire

Archaeology Notes

NF72SW 3 734 207

(Area NF 734 207) About 500 yards north of the aisled round-house excavated in 1951-2 by Lethbridge, at Kilpheder, South Uist (NF72SW 1 ) a few stones of a midden are all that remains of another ? aisled round-house wheelhouse which was completely removed a few years previously. The site is known as Bruthach an Tigh Tallan (the brae of the buried house). The midden has produced a ring-headed pin or pins dated to between AD. 100-200. A bronze pin was found by Dr. Kissling.

T C Lethbridge 1952.

There is now no trace of this aisled round-house wheelhouse and midden.

Visited by OS (W D J) 6 May 1965.

NF 764 474 to NF 758 140 The South Uist machair has been surveyed between 1993-1996, from Cille Bhrighde (West Kilbride) in the extreme S of the island to Baile Gharbhaidh (Balgarva) at the N end of the island, a distance of 35km. This year, the number of known prehistoric and Early Historic settlement sites has now increased from 81 to 176.

The continuing pattern of Iron Age-Viking Age settlement clusters along the machair supports the hypothesis of 'proto-townships'; that the system of land allotment amongst the townships is essentially an Iron Age phenomenon which survived substantially intact until the Clearances of the early 19th century (see unpublished reports, Sheffield University). An unusual concentration of sites was found at Machair Mheadhanach in the Iochdar (Eochar) area, N of the rocket range and W of Loch Bee; some 35 settlement sites, ranging in date from the Late Bronze Age to the early post-medieval period, are strung out within a 2km line along a NW-SE axis. This multifocal pattern is very different from other settlement patterns on South Uist but still fits the 'proto-township' model.

The second major concentration of sites is at Drimore where a group of 14 settlement sites, of various dates, are arranged in a SSE-NNW line 750m long. Most of these were identified in the 1950s during survey and excavation in advance of the construction of the rocket range.

The pattern of hypothesised proto-townships throughout the survey area (unpublished report, Sheffield University) holds reasonably well but there are gaps for each of the six 'shieling' (gearraidh) townships of South Uist. This suggests that these shieling townships may have formed in the medieval period by sub-division of larger units, and thus do not have prehistoric predecessors. Other medieval peatland settlements are tentatively identified at Upper Bornish, Aisgernis (Askernish), Frobost and Cille Pheadair (Kilpheder). There is a strong possibility that most of the nucleated villages mapped by William Bald in 1805 are located on earlier post-medieval and medieval settlements. The movement of settlement off the machair mainly occurred in the post-Norse medieval period. The only exceptions are Baghasdal, where the machair settlement was abandoned only after 1805 supposedly due to 'machair fever' (James MacDonald pers comm), and Machair Mheadhanach which was deserted some time between 1654 and 1805.

Sponsor: Sheffield University.

M Parker Pearson 1996

Activities

Resistivity (1998)

NF 73 20 The two Middle Iron Age settlement mounds (Sites 64 and 63) on Cille Pheadair machair have been recorded since 1950. Site 64 is the location of the wheelhouse excavated by T C Lethbridge (NMRS NF 72 SW 3). Geophysical survey, using a resistivity meter, on both mounds has identified anomalies which suggest the presence of two more undisturbed wheelhouses in Site 64 and a potential group of other wheelhouses in Site 63.

A Chamberlain and M Parker Pearson 1998.

Publication Account (2007)

NF72 2 BRUTHACH AN TIGH TALLAN ('Bruthach an Tionail')

NF/734207

This unexcavated probable wheel-house site in South Uist was represented by a midden on the surface of which Dr W Kissling found a bronze ring-headed pin [2, 184]. The name means 'the brae of the buried house' and the site "was completely removed some years ago" [2, 176]. The site stood about 500 yards north of site NF72 3, below. A more recent survey of the machair by The University of Sheffield suggests that there may still be a group of unexplored wheelhouses at this site [3, 4].

Sources: 1. NMRS site NF 72 SW 3: 2.. Lethbridge 1952: 3. Discovery and Excavation in Scotland 1998, 102: 4. Parker Pearson and Sharples 1999, 3, 8, 16-19, 21 and 260.

E W MacKie 2007

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