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  • Lazy beds, Balephetrish

    Here ‘lazy’ has the Scots meaning of ‘fallow or untilled’ (Dictionary of the Scots Language). A form of spade cultivation where the soil is thin. A line of turf is dug and folded over, the then another is dug so that the lines meet. Potatoes or barley were planted inside the ‘sandwich’, usually with a little seaweed. It was widely used on Tiree by cottars in the nineteenth century (potatoes were introduced to Tiree around 1758), particularly on ground near the shore or on the sliabh or moor.
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  • Elizabeth Gibb Collection

    Evelyn Elizabeth Balfour Gibb (née Milne) (1914–2000) was the daughter of Lady Frances Balfour, herself the daughter of the 8th Duke of Argyll. She married and lived in Sussex, but was a frequent visitor to the island, usually staying at The Lodge. She developed an interest in archaeology, and spent a lot of time in the 1970s and 80s roaming Tiree, particularly its Iron Age forts. She donated some material to the National Museum of Scotland, but this collection from 16 find spots was donated to An Iodhlann by her granddaughter Stephanie Clarke.

    Dun, Caolas (which one is not described): 1983; 4 small sherds, 2 large pieces of slag.

    Dun Mor Vaul: 13 thick sherds (2 rims, one of which is everted; 1 comb decoration), 1 possible lug.

    Dunes between Brock and Ruaig Post Office: 11 small sherds.

    Kirkapol: 1 sherd.

    Dùn an t-Sìthein, Gott: 13 sherds (1 flat base).

    Old Manse garden, Gott: 2 sherds.

    Island House (possible location): hammer/smoothing stone (see photo).

    Stream on boundary of Heylipol and Balinoe (NL 98686 42460): 9 sherds, 1 glazed pottery piece, 1 piece of slate, 1 of 3cm tapered nail, 1 hammer stone, whelk, limpet, scallop shells, animal bones and teeth, 4 bits of hard dark unidentified material.

    Barradhu, Hynish: 1 piece of pumice, 2 small smoothing stones, 1 piece of slag, 1 limpet shell, 3 pieces of iron (possible cartspring).

    Barradhu, Hynish (rock shelter): around 60 worked flints, 15 sherds (1 with comb decoration).

    Dunes between Hynish Farm and Dùn nan Cleite: 1 worked flint (awl), 3 sherds, 1 3-cm iron cylinder with two notches (see photo).

    Dùn na Cleite: 1972; 8 sherds (2 with everted rims and 1 with comb decoration), 1 worked flint, 3 animal teeth.

    Dùn Hiader: 1972. 5 sherds (1 decorated, 1 with an indented, raised cordon), 1 smoothing stone, 1 hammerstone, 1 piece of iron 2 cm long, 1 piece of burnt bone.

    Balephuil: 2 worked flints, 14 thick sherds, 1 small bone awl, 1 small pointed bone tool. ‘Sand dunes below Balephuil – just over the fence, not in the field you go down to the shore from, but the next along to the NW. 1982 May. Dr Brown knew this was an old settlement. Jean has a finger bone!’

    Balephetrish: 1 hammerstone.

    Sorisdale, Coll: 1 large fine sherd, 6 small sherds, 3 worked flints, 12 cowrie shells, 3 large pieces of bloom.

    Included was a note [about possible rock art]: ‘I’m sure I found some [cup marks] on the non-seaward side of Dun Moor Vaul above the well/spring. I have a photograph somewhere. Quite small depressions in a circle about 12 of them. [?] “votive” holes in rock in Crete. 1994. EG’
  • Ruin above the Ringing Stone

    This substantial ruin on the raised beach above the Ringing Stone is enigmatic. It is not marked on Turnbull 1768 map, or on the 1st edition of the OS in 1878. It is likely to be medieval. It sits on a large platform.

    This is the SCAPE Report entry (Moore and Wilson 2002):

    T63, Map 14
    NM 02756 48591
    Loch Dubh a Gharraidh Fail (NE of)
    Structure, enclosure, mound, cultivations, boundary
    Unknown
    <100m from coast edge
    The grassed over footings of a rectangular building lie between a freshwater loch and the shore. The building measures 14m by 7m externally and 11m by 4m internally. It is aligned E-W. The side walls are slightly bowed towards the center and the end walls are rounded. The walls are generally 1.5m in width. There are two opposing entrances at the W end of the building. The floor level inside lies some 1m below the top of the walls. There is the suggestion of a 1m wide bench or similar feature along the S and W walls. This may be the remains of a blackhouse, although the bowed walls and possible internal bench could suggest that it is a house of the Norse period, while the E-W alignment and associated enclosure could indicate that it is the site of an early church. (ii) The building is partially surrounded by an L- shaped enclosure defined by a grassy bank. This measures 45m across at its widest point. (iii) Traces of old cultivations are visible to the E of the building but these do not encroach on the enclosure or struc- ture. (iv) A small mound to the W measures 4m in diameter and stands up to 0.3m high. It may be a clearance cairn but appears to have a kerb built of larger stones. (v) A earthen boundary bank connects with the enclosure and runs off to the E. This is 2.5m wide and stands up to 0.4m high. This site is not threatened but would be a suitable candidate for more intensive field survey and assessment.
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  • Dun site: An Dun, Balephetrish

    An Dun, Balephetrish

    Inner Hebrides Archaeological Project: Tiree Atlantic Roundhouses Surveys Darko Maričević, University of Reading
    The following surveys of Atlantic roundhouses on Tiree were conducted in the summer of 2007 in the course of now completed PhD research into the later prehistory of Tiree and Coll. A magnetometry survey was conducted with a Bartington Grad601 dual sensor gradiometer in zigzag mode at 0.5m traverse spacing and 0.25m interval reading. Resistivity surveys were conducted with the Geoscan RM15 resistivity meter with twin probe array, mobile probe span 0.5 m, traverse spacing 0.5 m, interval reading 0.5 m.

    NM 0130 4805 (centred on) An Dùn, Balephetrish
    Resistivity survey was conducted over the area occupied by the denuded remains of the Atlantic roundhouse and its outworks. The survey results display great polarity between the resistance of the southern and northern halves of the wall arc. The southern part showed much higher resistance consistent with the large amount of rubble debris. There is evidence for an intramural hollow in the NE part of the wall arc, but it is not clear how far it extends or if it would be wide enough to be habitable. Anomalies interpreted as multiple secondary structures are scattered in the interior and the perimeter of the roundhouse structure

    Discovery and Excavation in Scotland 2009, pp. 51–2.

    Beveridge, E. (1903) ‘Tiree and Coll’. p. 105
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  • Fort site: Dun Balephetrish



    Duncan MacKinnon

    DUN BALEPHETRISH

    NM 031480. At the centre of the dun an area had been dug and returfed. Beside it a second interference was lying open in July 1973, with sherds projecting from the sides. The area some 4 fl. by 2 ft. was scraped and some 80 sherds were collected. The sherds were of general broch ware; two have zig-zag pattern, perhaps functional, and there is one rim.

    Discovery and Excavation in Scotland 1973, pp. 10

    Beveridge, E. (1903) ‘Tiree and Coll’. p. 104.
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  • Two possible orthostats in Balephetrish

    Two colour photographs of standing stones on Archie John MacLean`s apportionment of the Balephetrish Common Grazing taken by Mary MacKinnon, Parkhouse in 2010. (Originals stored with four additional similar photographs in filing cabinet 9 drawer 3)
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  • NOSAS visit to Tiree in 2017

    Blog writer by John Wombell, including intertidal trackways on a Ruaig beach; nousts and kelp sites on Fadamul, Salum; drilled holes at the harbour, Milton; huts on Kenavara; rock art and the Ringing Stone.

    NOSAS, the North of Scotland Archaeological Society, has made several visits to Tiree, in particular, surveying all the rock art.

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  • Date of peat sample from Balephetrish beach

    Peat washed up on Balephetrish beach dated to 9474 years +/- 32 years (Jim Hill, Coll, pers. comm. 2017). The sample was tested through Glasgow University.
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  • Ringing Stone: cup marked lithophone

    ‘KORY FINMACKOUL # TIR A 1 NGR NM027487
    G ‘the hollow of Finn mac Cumaill’

    Kory Finmackoul, 1654 Blaeu
    No longer known in the oral tradition of the island

    Balephetrish | At the centre of a natural amphitheatre created by the raised beach above the Balephetrish shoreline is a rock known as G Clach a’ Choire ‘the rock of the hollow’ (Mairi MacKinnon, pers. comm.). More commonly today it is called The Ringing Stone, because of the sound it produces when struck (Canmore ID 21529). This rounded glacial erratic stands as a perched boulder 1.8 m high. It has been pock-marked by over sixty cup markings. Some may be Neolithic in origin, but many have been enlarged during historical times (Tertia Barnett, pers. comm.). It is unique in Scotland: ‘A rock gong … listed by John MacKenzie as one of the seven wonders of Scotland … Clach a’ Choire was “said to contain a crock of gold, but if it ever split Tiree will disappear beneath the waves”‘ (Black 2008, 396–7).

    Photogrammetry on SCRAP by James McComas, NOSAS

    There are other rock gongs or lithophones in Scotland: for example, the Iron Stone at Huntly in Aberdeenshire (Canmore ID 17827), which, like The Ringing Stone, ‘has been wedged off the ground by small rocks placed at both ends’ (Fagg 1997, 5). This is possibly to enhance the stone’s resonance. There are also two Ringing Rocks on Iona. Lithophones are common in Africa, where ‘the voice of the rock is believed to be the voice of an ancestor or other spirit with power to summon the supernatural’ (Fagg 1997, 3). It is possible it was played as a musical instrument: ‘Two people working at the same site, knocking stone upon stone, might well have set up quite complex rhythms, as Nigerian tribesmen do to this day using resonant rocks, sometimes singing through bits of tubing and other items to distort their voices, which are intended to be those of their ancestors speaking from another world’ (Purser 1992, 25). Limestone and granite seem to be the commonest rocks forming rock gongs, the most important characteristic being their crystalline structure (Fagg 1997, 6).

    Kory Finmackoul, which may be transcribed Coire Finn Mac Cumaill, is a Gaelic construction in G coire ‘circular hollow surrounded by hills’ (Dwelly). Coire occurs in two other locations on Tiree: G Poll a’ Choire ‘the pool of the hollow’ in Hynish, and G An Coire Geur ‘the sharp hollow’, a low-lying area of croft land in Barrapol. It is a very common element throughout Gaelic-speaking Scotland: for example, Coire Liath in Torosay, Mull (SP).

    The specific is the mythic Old Gaelic personal name Finn mac Cumaill (Fionn mac Cumhaill, Campbell 1891, 16). Finn-names based on this warrior-hunter, who lived ‘outside society in a wilderness boundary zone’ (Fitzpatrick et al. 2015, 28), are found throughout Europe, but particularly in Ireland, Man and Scotland: for example, Seefin in County Wicklow and Suidhe Coire Fhionn or Fingal’s Cauldron Seat (Canmore ID 39705), two stone circles on Arran. These names derive from Gaelic ballads including the Finn Cycle of Tales (the Fiannaigheacht), which appear for the first time in Ireland as early as the seventh century (Fitzpatrick et al. 2015, 25). Most of the Scottish Gaelic ballads that survive were composed in the later Middle Ages In both Ireland and Scotland (Meek 1998). Finn-names are particularly located in places of geological transition or prehistoric significance (Fitzpatrick et al. 2015). This isolated spot on the northern shore of Tiree appears to have been a place of story and mystery in both prehistoric and medieval times (see An Uamh Mhòr; and see Martin 1994 (1695, 206).’ (extract from Holliday, J. (2021) Longships in the Sand, pp. 529–30)

    Picture of Dr Tertia Barnett, the leader of the Scottish Rock Art project, on the Ringing Stone.
    Photogrammetry by Alan Thompson, NOSAS
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