Carn Liath (broch)

Coordinates: 57°59′14″N 3°54′43″W / 57.987215°N 3.912052°W / 57.987215; -3.912052

Carn Liath

Interior of Carn Liath
Shown within Highland
Location Scottish Highlands
Coordinates 57°59′14″N 3°54′43″W / 57.987215°N 3.912052°W / 57.987215; -3.912052
Type Broch
History
Periods Iron Age
Site notes
Ownership Historic Scotland

Càrn Liath (English: Grey Cairn)[1] is an Iron Age broch on the eastern shore of the Scottish Highlands, near Golspie, Sutherland.

Location

The broch is located north of Golspie in Sutherland]].[2] It stands beside the A9 road, around 4 kilometres northeast of Golspie.[3] The site is under the care of Historic Scotland and has a car-park and information board for visitors.[1]

Description

The broch has an external diameter of around 19 metres and an internal diameter of around 10 metres.[2] The broch wall is particularly thick.[1] The entrance passage is on the east side and is over 4 metres long.[2] The entrance has elaborate door checks and a bar-hole to control access to the interior.[4] On the right-hand side of the entrance passage is a small guard cell.[1]

The surrounding enclosure contains the ruins of additional stone buildings.[1]

Excavations

The broch was first excavated in the 19th century by the Duke of Sutherland, and was initially thought to be a burial cairn.[5] Finds included pottery, flint chips, stone hammers, mortars and pestles, querns, whorls, shale rings, long-handled bone combs, a whale bone club, a silver fibula, steatite cups and an iron blade.[5]

In 1909 the entrance passage was still visible on the east side of the broch, but by 1960 no structural features were discernible.[2]

The site was excavated again in 1986.[5] This showed that the site was occupied in the Bronze Age, before the broch was built.[5] A Bronze Age cist burial with a food vessel was discovered.[5] The foundations of many outbuildings were found in the enclosure surrounding the broch.[4] Although many were clearly from a later period, some may have been contemporary with the broch.[4]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Carn Liath". Historic Scotland. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 RCAHMS. "Carn Liath (6833)". Canmore. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  3. Ritchie, J N G (1998). Brochs of Scotland. Shire Publications. p. 45. ISBN 0747803897.
  4. 1 2 3 Armit, Ian (1998). Scotland's Hidden History. Tempus. p. 105. ISBN 0752414003.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 MacSween, Ann; Sharp, Mick (1989). Prehistoric Scotland. New Amsterdam. p. 57. ISBN 071346173X.

Further reading

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