MHG150 - Vitrified Fort - The Torr, Ardnamurchan
Summary
No summary available.
Type and Period (3)
- FORT (Early Bronze Age to Pictish - 2400 BC? to 900 AD?)
- DUN (Iron Age - 550 BC? to 560 AD?)
- VITRIFIED STONE (Early Iron Age to Pictish - 550 BC? to 900 AD?)
Protected Status
Full Description
Site photographed by J Kirby - The Highland Archaeology Challenge, 10/2003.
J Aitken : 23/1/04
NM67SE 4 6622 7018.
(NM 5622 7018) Vitrified Fort (NR) (Site of)
OS 6"map, Argyllshire, 2nd ed., (1900)
A vitrified fort with outworks on a wooded, knife-edged ridge called The Torr. It survives as a heavily vitrified wall enclosing a sub-oval area measuring some 40m NNW-SSE by 17m. The interior consists of a natural hollow with a higher area to the SE isolated by a low cliff. No entrance is evident. Extending from it to the NNW along either side of the knife edge are two vitrified walls, the W more pronounced than the E. These terminate on a circular vitrifed structure set into the NNW shoulder of the ridge, and measuring about 8.0m in diameter between the centres of a wall about 3.0m thick. It is presumably a 'watch tower' as it commands an extensive view in all directions except the SSE. No entrance is evident. No wall faces are visible in the whole of this complex, and the vitrifaction is most evident on the outside of the walls.
Attached to the S arc of the main fort is another stone-walled structure which may be either an outwork or part of an earlier fort. It is defined by a tumbled stone wall, showing no trace of vitrifaction, in which the outer face can occasionally be seen. The entrance, in the SW, is visible as a dip in the turf-covered wall, with an approach to it from the SSE by means of a natural shelf in the slope, about 5.0m wide, which ascends from the base of the ridge.
Surveyed at 1:10,000.
Visited by OS (A A) 3 June 1970.
Fort and Dun (probable), The Torr, Shielfoot: This remarkable group of prehistoric fortifications comprises a univallate fort, whose wall appears to be heavily vitrified for most of its course (IA on RCAHMS plan), an outwork, which displays no evidence of vitrifaction whatsoever (IB), and a small oval enclosure, also heavily vitrified, which is probably to be identified as a dun (II). The precise relationship of these three elements is uncertain, however, as the entire summit (just over 50m OD) is covered with dense scrub, and the remains themselves are masked by a thick carpet of heather, moss, and bilberry. The spine of the ridge, aligned NNW and SSE, consists mainly of jagged outcrops, while the flanks are steeply inclined and rock-studded, the only relatively easy approach being from the SSW. The fort, which is of irregular oval plan, occupies the highest part of the ridge and measures internally 17m in greatest width by at least 90m long; the NNW end is obscured by enclosure (II). It was defended by a single stone wall (IA), which was originally timber-laced but now appears, for the most part, as a band of vitrified core-material, up to 4.5m thick, in which a few stretches of outer facing-stones survive, as shown on the plan. The wall is best preserved near the N end of the SW side, where the outer face stands as much as 0.5m high in three courses,and huge masses of vitrifaction, some about 2.7m high, protrude through the grass and heather. For a distance of about 17m on the SSE the wall-core does not appear to have been vitrified, and further to the N a large section of the wall has collapsed down the steep flank of the ridge. The position of the entrance is uncertain, but it probably lay on the SSW, near the foot of the rock-face that bisects the SE lobe of the interior. The internal width of the NW half of the fort can rarely have exceeded 4m. Further protection was provided by an outlying wall (IB), which was drawn for 35m along the outer edge of the terrace of the SSW, at an average depth of 10m below the level of the summit, continued thence obliquely up the flank of the ridge, and then returned along the rocky spine that slopes gently up to the SE end of the fort. For most of its course the wall has been reduced to a low band of stony debris, and it does not appear to have been vitrified at any point. It would be reasonable to assume that wall IB was not timber-laced, and may therefore have been added to the fort some time after work on the main wall was completed - a possibility which is heightened by the irregular course it follows and the degree to which it diverges from the line of the inner work. Several stretches of outer facing-stones and two stones of the inner face can stil be seen in position, the wall being particularly well preserved where it runs along the crest of the rocky spine. Its thickness in this sector is 2m, but elsewhere, especially lower down the slope, it probably approaches 4m. The position of the entrance is indicated by a narrow gap in the wall-debris near the middle of the terrace of the SSW.
The oval enclosure (II) measures 7m by 5.5m within a single stone wall which survives as a bank of vitrified rubble, 2.5m thick, so dilapidated and overgrown that neither its precise relationship with wall IA nor the position of the entrance can be determined without excavation. However, the most likely interpretation of the evidence is that the remains are those of a small dun with a timber-lace wall, which has been constructed on top of the ruins of the univallate fort.
RCAHMS 1980, visited 1973. <1>
See assoc. docs. File (photos).
J Aitken : 14/03/02.
See Associated Record NM67SE0109
DEH09/06/05
Lies within scheduled area NM67SE0003 (HS7800) see record for associated References and NMRS details NM67SE0004
The vitrified fort was visited and photographed by S Salem on a visit with A Wright, K Bowker, and J Bowker in November 2013. <3>
This site was included in the Atlas of Hillforts of Britain and Ireland online database. See link below for site entry. <4>
Sources/Archives (4)
- <1> SHG2660 Text/Report: RCAHMS. 1980. The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Argyll: an inventory of the monuments volume 3: Mull, Tiree, Coll and Northern Argyll (excluding the early medieval and later monuments of Iona). . 88-9, No. 160; plan fig. 84.
- <2> SHG42 Text/Publication/Article: Nisbet, H C. 1974. 'A geological approach to vitrified forts, part I: the archaeological and scientific background', Science and Archaeology, Vol 12, pp 3-12. p 9.
- <3> SHG25894 Image/Photograph(s): Salem, S. 2013. Photographs - The Torr, Ardnamurchan. Colour. Digital.
- <4> SHG27950 Interactive Resource/Online Database: Lock, G. & Ralston, I.. 2017. Atlas of Hillforts of Britain and Ireland. SC2537.
Map
Location
Grid reference | Centred NM 6623 7018 (93m by 143m) (2 map features) |
---|---|
Map sheet | NM67SE |
Civil Parish | ARDNAMURCHAN |
Geographical Area | LOCHABER |
Finds (0)
Related Monuments/Buildings (0)
Related Investigations/Events (0)
External Links (3)
- http://hillforts.arch.ox.ac.uk/records/SC2537.html (Link to online Atlas of Hillforts of Britain and Ireland site entry)
- http://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/SM7800 (Online designation description (Historic Environment Scotland))
- https://canmore.org.uk/site/22514 (View RCAHMS Canmore entry for this site)
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