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Cuiltburn
Enclosure (Roman), Roman Road (Roman)
Site Name Cuiltburn
Classification Enclosure (Roman), Roman Road (Roman)
Canmore ID 25295
Site Number NN81NE 19
NGR NN 8923 1765
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/25295
- Council Perth And Kinross
- Parish Muthill
- Former Region Tayside
- Former District Perth And Kinross
- Former County Perthshire
NN81NE 19 8923 1765.
NN 8923 1765 The site has long been known from the air as a rectangular enclosure sitting immediately E of (and parallel to) the Roman road c600m SW of the fort of Strageath, and suspected of being a fortlet.
A resistivity survey showed one site to be rather too small, however, at 18m (N-S) by c23m (E-W). Trial excavations showed the N and S ditches to be flat bottomed, c2m wide and 1m deep and to have been backfilled after only a brief period of use. Excavation in the interior revealed no sign of a rampart or palisade, but a 7.2m (E-W) by 3m (N-S) structure, founded on three massive beams, was found just inside the N ditch, which yields a single samian fragment.
Sponsor: University of Manchester.
D J Woolliscroft 1995.
Excavation (by D J Woolliscroft) of this rectangular ditched enclosure aligned on the Roman road c.600m SW of Strageath Roman fort, revealed a site 18m N-S by 23m E-W within a flat-bottomed ditch c.2m wide and 1m deep. No trace could be found of an internal rampart. The N part of the interior had been occupied by a timber structure, 7.65m E-W by 3m N-S, founded on three massive beams represented by parallel foundation-trenches; one of the latter yielded a decorated samian sherd of Flavian date. No entrance gap in the ditch W towards the road was visible on aerial photographs, nor could one be located by geophysical survey.
L J F Keppie 1996
NN 892 176 Further excavation on the rectangular enclosure (NMRS NN81NE 19; Woolliscroft 1995) found the ditch system to be an open square, c 18m across, with the open side facing E, away from the Roman road to Strageath, which runs c 10m to the W of and parallel to the site's W ditch. Inside, three sleeper beam founded structures were located, also forming the same E-facing open square, one of which yielded two sherds of Roman coarse ware cooking pot. As in 1995, the ditch showed a steep-sided, flat-bottomed profile and no entrance break was located facing the Roman road. The remains of two roundhouse foundations were traced underlying the beam structures.
Sponsor: Roman Gask Project.
D J Woolliscroft 1998
Aerial Photographic Transcription (6 December 1995 - 28 November 1996)
An aerial transcription was produced from oblique aerial photographs. Information from Historic Environment Scotland (BM) 31 March 2017.
Aerial Photographic Interpretation (4 December 1997)
Cropmarks on oblique aerial photographs (RCAHMSAP and CUCAP: 1976, 1981, 1989) reveal a rectilinear enclosure lying immediately to the E of the Roman Road (NN81NE 78). It has been excavated by Dr D Woolliscroft of the Dept of Archaeology, Manchester University. Other cropmarks to the SW, W and NW may be due to recent agricultural activity, perhaps relating to the former positions of feeder bins or hay bales. Further cropmarks in the adjacent field to the SE may also be the product of recent agricultural activity and are described elsewhere (NN81NE 43)
Information from RCAHMS (DCC) 4 December 1997