Aberdeenshire HER - NJ82NW0003 - BARRA HILLFORT

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Main Details

Primary ReferenceNJ82NW0003
NameBARRA HILLFORT
NRHE Card No.NJ82NW4
NRHE Numlink 19668
HES SM No. 3997
HES LB No. NULL
Site Form Earthwork
Site Condition Incomplete
Details Remains of hill fort, comprising three ramparts, and bearing a certain resemblances to the Barmekin of Echt (NJ70NW0013). The innermost line of defence is a ruined wall, measuring 2.3m thick and 0.8m high, with a single entrance in the east. Two ramparts and ditches lying outside this have three entrances, two of which are still flanked with the remains of walls. The innermost wall is almost certainly a later structure than the outer two. The medial rampart - a soil dump measuring 0.23m high and 1,54m wide - incorporates, on the northwest side, a steep rock outcrop, at the north end of which is a gap where the rampart merges with the third rampart. This gap appears to be covered by a short stretch of additional rampart on the outside of the defences. The outer rampart is made of stone and has two construction phases. It measures 1.75m thick and up to 0.65m in height. The interior has long been under plough with rig and furrow causing damage to the north sector of the defences. It measures 122m by 95m and is featureless except for a huge erratic boulder which must have been placed on the hill in glacial times (locally known as Wallace's Putting Stone). The site is traditionally the encampment of the Comyns at the Battle of Old Meldrum. Much of the surrounding slopes of the hill are now overlain with rig and furrow. Significant numbers of pottery sherds continue to appear as a result of mole and rabbit activity on the site. As part of the Hillforts of Strathdon Project five trenches were dug in July 2009 (Oxford Archaeology North). They revealed significant quantities of charcoal and artefacts including possible Grooved Ware. An internal rock cut ring groove feature was also identified. The excavation recorded five phases of human activity: early prehistoric, Neolithic to middle Iron Age, late prehistoric, early medieval (Pictish) and medieval to modern. A variety of unstratified worked lithics, mostly debitage, indicate some form of domestic activity in the Neolithic/Early Bronze Age. Lithics from the outer and middle ramparts indicates their construction during or after the Neolithic/Early Bronze Age. An inner rampart blocking off earlier entrances to north, south and southwest was constructed in the early to middle Iron Age. The only evidence from the early medieval period is the outer ditch which was excavation at the base of the middle rampart. A calibrated radiocarbon date of 560 - 360 BC was obtained from the basal fill of the ditch associated with the inner enclosure. A calibrated radiocarbon date of AD 380-580 has been obtained from the primary fill of the ditch between the two outer ramparts.
Last Update03/04/2024
Updated Bycpalmer
Compiler 
Date of Compilation 

Google Map for NJ82NW0003

National Grid Reference: NJ 8022 2570



Event Details

Event DateEvent TypeOASIS ID
2009 Evaluation

Excavations and Surveys


Artefact and Ecofact

Date MDate YArtefact TypeFinderRecovery MethodConditionStorage LocationAccess No.
72009 CHARCOAL Excavation  
72009 GROOVED WARE Excavation  
   POTTERY AAW Stray Find Personal Possession  

Ecofact

Samples
Palynology
Ecofact Notes

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
FORTSHILL A100
RAMPARTS  B100
DITCHESDEFENSIVE C100
RIG & FURROW  D100
POTTERY GROOVED-WAREE85