Monument record MHG1588 - Broch/Crannog, Greysteil Castle

Summary

No summary available.

Location

Grid reference Centred ND 1794 4166 (70m by 70m) (Buffered by site type)
Map sheet ND14SE
Old County CAITHNESS
Civil Parish LATHERON
Geographical Area CAITHNESS

Map

Type and Period (2)

Full Description

Greysteil Castle, Loch Rangag, ND14SE0004
Greysteil Castle lies on a promontory sticking out into Loch Rangag. In spite of the fact that access to it could be easily controlled, a 2.5m thick wall cuts across the promontory on the landward side. Between this wall and the broch is a boulder lined path, described in 1726 as having red currants growing in it.

Name and robber?
(c.9m/18m/4m)
Armit, I., 1997. Celtic Scotland. Edinburgh: Batsford.
RCAHMS. 1911. Caithness. Edinburgh: HMSO, 60-1, No. 222.
Information from SCRAN Project, March, 2000

ND14SE 4 1795 4167.
Greysteil Castle (NAT) Broch (NR) OS 1:10,000 map, (1975)

The bare ruins of a broch, about 69ft overall diameter, with a wall 14-15ft thick, and 12ft max height, occupy a spit of land. The base of exterior is visible at several points. The entrance, from the landward side, is ruined beyond recognition, but has had a guard chamber on right, back wall of which is visible. A mural chamber, 11ft long by 5ft wide, is exposed in N wall.
An 8ft thick wall, concentric with the broch, and about 26ft from it, curvess across neck of spit. Through its centre, a passage 6ft wide and walled on either side, leads to the broch entrance. The ruins are known as 'Greysteil Castle'.
RCAHMS 1911, visited 1910.

'Greysteil Castle' is a broch with an outwork situated on a probably partly artificial peninsula on E side of Loch Rangag.
The broch survives as a mound of partly turf-covered debris spread to 20m diameter and about 4m max height. There are several outer facing-stones in S and W arcs but none are visible elsewhere, although overall diameter appears to have been between 18-18.5m. The inner face can be traced intermittently giving an internal diameter of 9m but as this is at top of mound it probably represents diameter above the scarcement. The guard chamber on N side of debris-filled entrance passage in E and part of a mural chamber in NW, as described by RCAHMS. The base of broch mound is encircled round W half by remnants of a modern stone wall.
The curving outer wall appears to spring from broch wall in N and S. It is boulder-faced and varies in width between 3.3m in N and 2m at central entrance where outer face is exposed to a height of two courses. The space between this entrance and broch entrance is spanned by a boulder-flanked approach about 6m long and 2m wide.
Surveyed at 1:10,000. Visited by OS (I S S) 21 April 1972.

Greysteil Castle, a broch with outworks, is as described. The existence of a raised beach about 0.5m above present surface of loch indicates beyond doubt that peninsula upon which broch stands was formerly an island, and may have been a crannog. On the landward side of the present isthmus is a heather-covered bank in which some stone is exposed. It is about 1m average height and 3-4m wide, and extends N-S for a distance of 26m, protecting the landward approach. Some 11m from N end of bank is a gap, with a turf-covered causeway extending from it across isthmus to terminate on outwork, but not at entrance. Either this causeway is contemporary with the broch and the outwork later, or the broch and outwork were built at the same time and the causeway served an earlier structure, ie. a crannog.
Visited by OS (N K B) 6 December 1982.

East Caithness Local Plan, May 1987: P117/6.25. Countryside Facilities and Trails.
POLICY - The Council will encourage development of a range of countryside facilities, as resources permit.
Interpretive Facilities.
J Aitken : 23/05/01.

Sources/Archives (6)

  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Broch, L. Rangag '73. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Greytail Castle. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Loch Rangag, Greysteil Castle. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
  • --- Text/Report: RCAHMS. 1911. The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments and Constructions of Scotland. Third report and inventory of monuments and constructions in the county of Caithness. . 60-1, No. 222.
  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Broch 'Greysteil Castle', Loch Rangag. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .
  • --- Image/Photograph(s): Broch, Greysteil Castle, Caithess. Colour Slide; Digital Image. .

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Protected Status/Designation

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Related Events/Activities (1)

Record last edited

May 13 2016 12:00AM

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