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Iona Monastery, Torr An Aba

Cell (Early Medieval)(Possible), Cross Base (Early Medieval)

Site Name Iona Monastery, Torr An Aba

Classification Cell (Early Medieval)(Possible), Cross Base (Early Medieval)

Alternative Name(s) Tor An Aba; Tor Abb; Dum Ni Manich

Canmore ID 21650

Site Number NM22SE 4.01

NGR NM 2861 2453

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/21650

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

  • Council Argyll And Bute
  • Parish Kilfinichen And Kilvickeon
  • Former Region Strathclyde
  • Former District Argyll And Bute
  • Former County Argyll

Archaeology Notes

NM22SE 4.01 2861 2453

(NM 2861 2453) A cell, thought to be that of St Columba mentioned by Adamnan, was revealed by excavation in 1957 on the top of Tor Abb which was formerly known as 'Dun nam Manach' (A Ritchie and E Ritchie 1934) - 'Fort of the Monks'.

Tor Abb was originally a ridge but has been levelled on top by revetting both sides, the revetments being held in place by huge boulders. On the west, the revetting has been left exposed, but on the east, the supporting stones appear to have been robbed and the earth has slipped. On the semi-artificial top of the mound a small, square cell has been built, its low stone walls being carefully keyed into irregularities in the rock. The interior is scooped. The remains suggest that the wall itself has been only a few feet high supporting a 'wig-wam' type roof of wood, turf and heather thatch.

Within the cell was a broad slab of rock, which could have served as a seat or bed, and three shaped granite stones, lined up with a slot in the natural rock. These must have supported a table-top of stone or wood. There were virtually no finds and the cell was filled with clean beach-pebbles as if for preservation. A medieval cross-base partially overlay the cell wall on the north.

The suggestion that this was Columba's cell appears to be supported by all the available evidence.

M Martin 1695; O G S Crawford 1933; C Thomas 1957; R Reece, undated; A C Thomas 1971.

The remains on Tor an Aba are generally as described.

Surveyed at 1:2500.

Visited by OS (RD) 9 June 1972.

Activities

Excavation (10 July 1956)

An small area around the corss base on Torr an Aba was excavated by Charles Thomas in 1956. A cutting was made on the middle part of the ridge where, even before the turf was removed, stones were visible in a manner suggesting that they were not part of the natural rock so evident to thenorth and south. Once the turf was removed, the central portion of the top of the ridge was seen to be artificial: 'the main feature seems to be a large square mortared plinth containing a single slab of micaceous rock, with a socket through it for a cross (-shaft)'

Information from E Fowler and PJ Fowler 1988.

Excavation (1 August 1957)

A further small area was excavated by Charles Thomas in 1957 to the south of the cross base (revealed in 1956) on Torr an Aba. In 1956 it had been noted that the southern and south-eastern edge of the plinth of the crossbase overlay further masonry. It was therefore decided in 1957 to excavate a larger area across the slightly lower and more or less flat central part of the ridge-top immediately south of the plinth. The excavations revealed traces of a building, thought to be the cell of St Columba mentioned by Adamnan

Information from E Fowler and PJ Fowler 1988.

Field Visit (September 1980)

(Carved Stone No.6, 225) At the summit of Tórr an Aba a masonry pedestal about 2.7 m square incorporates an irregular slab of Moine granulite with mica partings measuring 1.01 m by 0.80m and 65mm in thickness. This appears to have been used at first as a millstone having a diameter of about 1.1 m and a central hole 0.18m in diameter, but subsequently one edge was damaged and it was adapted for use as a cross socket with a rectangular slot 0·36m by 0.13m cut through the original aperture. When the base was exposed by excavation in 1956, having been concealed below turf since the late 19th century (126), a course of granite boulders about 0·25m high and incorporating a slot was found in situ above the socket-stone (127), but these have since been removed. The construction of the existing pedestal suggests a late medieval date (128), although the socketed slab may have been first used at an earlier period.

RCAHMS 1982, visited September 1980

(126) Plan in Dryden MS 7

(127) Information from Professor A C Thomas

(128) Cf. the base of MacLean's Cross (no. 224) and the cross-base at Texa, Islay (Inventory of Argyll, 5 (forthcoming)).

Field Visit (September 1980)

The narrow rocky spine of Torr an Aba was described by Martin in 1695 as 'Dun Ni Manich, i.e. Monk's Fort, built of stone and lime, in form of a bastion' (29), and a revetment of massive boulders, apparently designed to enlarge the summit area, is still evident on the w face . The stone footing of a sub-circular structure, immediately s of and partly overlain by the medieval cross-base platform on the summit (No. 6, 225), was excavated in 1957 (30). It measured about 3m in maximum internal span, and the entrance was probably in the E wall , where any trace of a supporting revetment had disappeared. Along the tops of the walls were found traces of charcoal, thought by the excavator to represent stakes supporting the roof structure; the walls themselves were fitted into the irregular surface of the outcrop in a manner that has been compared with the construction of a hut on Dun Cui Bhuirg (No. 2) (31). This building has been identified by the excavator as Columba's cell (32), but the claim must be regarded as doubtful. It rests partly upon the conflation of Adomnan's references to the tegoriolum 'built in a higher place' and described as tabulis suffulto, interpreted by Professor Thomas as 'supported on revetments' (33), with those to the hospitiolum where Columba slept on the bare rock , whereas other scholars interpret these as two distinct buildings. It is true, however, that Torr an Aba is the only area E of Cnoc nan Carnan, apart from a knoll in Reilig Odhrain, where bedrock is exposed. When excavated, the structure was found to have been filled with pebbles, presumably after its abandonment. The line of its walls is now marked by a modern setting of mortared stones.

RCAHMS 1982, visited September 1980

(29) Martin, Western Islands, 288; (30) Coracle, no. 31 (1957), 12-13; Chadwick, N K et al., St Columba: Fourteenth Centenary 563-1963 (1963), pi. opp. p. 22; (31) DES (1958), 15; (32) Coracle, loc. cit.; (33) Adomnan, Columba (Anderson), 258. The normal meaning of this phrase is 'supported on planks, or joists'. The comparable phrase used by Adomnán to describe houses built on wooden supports near the River Nile is misquoted by the Andersons (ibid., 110). In the most recent edition it reads ‘in domibus transuersis trabibus (beams) suffultis' (Adamnan, De Locis, 104).

Aerial Photography (2 September 1994)

External Reference (28 October 2011)

Scheduled as element within 'The monument known as St Mary's Abbey, Iona, monastic settlement [comprising] the remains of the large early historic monastic settlement founded by St Columba in AD 563, St Martin's Cross, and parts of medieval buildings associated with the Benedictine Abbey of St Mary founded around AD 1200.'

Information from Historic Scotland, scheduling document dated 28 October 2011.

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