Monument record MHG12396 - Broch, Dun Bhuidhe

Summary

No summary available.

Location

Grid reference Centred NC 5645 6400 (70m by 70m) (Buffered by site type)
Map sheet NC56SE
Geographical Area SUTHERLAND
Old County SUTHERLAND
Civil Parish TONGUE

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

NC56SE 7 5645 6401.
Possible cist found.
Information from G A David, Glasgow University, 28 June 1966

At NC 5645 6401 is an amorphous stony mound, heavily quarried, measuring about 17m in diameter and 1m high. About 1914 Mr MacLeod (Info from Mr John H MacLeod, Achintyhalavin, Strath Melness) dug into top of the mound for road metalling and discovered a small circular chamber with a dry-stone lintelled passage leading off it. He crawled in and found 'thirty to forty similar chambers with connecting passages' which were filled in shortly afterwards and some of the stones used for building. In the first chamber were a number of bones and ashes. It is uncertain what the remains represent.
Surveyed at 1:2500. Visited by OS (ISS) 30 June 1971

Local inhabitants still recall this mound as a 'Pictish tower with passages beneath, uncovered about 40 years ago and producing some objects'. It is known as 'Dun Bhuidhe'. The chambers could be interpreted as mural and basal passages of a broch.
Info contained in letter and map from T C Welsh to OS
12 July 1973

This bracken covered mound, situated on the edge of a river terrace, is as described by OS investigator (ISS, 1971), and is broadly as planned by Welsh except that the "outworks" to the NE and SW of the mound do not resemble outer defences as inferred, but are more likely bands of tumble. Mr J H MacLeod died in 1973 and no further information is available locally beyond that passed on by Mr MacLeod. The name "Dun Bhuidhe" in reference to the mound is not known locally; the croft 80m to the SW is named "Dunbuie"(sic) but the occupier states that the name emanates from a nearby hill (not published), and not the mound.
From ground evidence and taking into account Mr MacLeod's description of internal structures, it appears that the mound could be the remains of a broch, chambered cairn, or galleried homestead. Hearsay evidence tends to support the former classification, but the situation, whereas reasonable for a broch, is more typical of a chambered cairn. A low ridge containing some stone and overgrown with braken extends NNE from the mound and could indicate a twin-phase long cairn, but excavation is necessary to decide its true function.
Visited by OS (NKB) 16 September 1977

Further examination of the mound revealed the massive base footings of a wall up to three courses high forming an arc 6.0m long. These remains indicate the remains of a broch approximately 15.5m in diameter.
Visited by OS (NKB) 7 July 1981

Sources/Archives (0)

Finds (0)

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

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Record last edited

Jan 28 2008 12:00AM

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