Aberdeen City HER - NJ81SW0307 - BISHOP'S CROSS, TYREBAGGER HILL

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Main Details

Primary ReferenceNJ81SW0307
NameBISHOP'S CROSS, TYREBAGGER HILL
NRHE Card No.NJ81SW24
NRHE Numlink 270810
HES SM No. NULL
HES LB No. NULL
Site Form Standing Structure
Site Condition Incomplete
Details The 'Bishop's Cross' and the 'Great Stone', marking the boundary of the lands belonging to the Bishop of Aberdeen in the Newhills parish, including the Crown land of Bishopston and the southern part of Tyrebagger Hill. These lands were specifically excluded from a charter of 1316, in which the boundary marks of the Bishop's Lands included 'the Bishop's Cross', a large rock (the 'Great Stone') circa 36m to the north, a recumbent stone (NJ81SW0017) at another point and certain boundary walls. In the charter the cross is described as lying in 'via regia', the king's highway, the ancient north road between Aberdeen and Inverness. Cruickshank described these sites in 1926, with the flat cross formed by banks of stone and turf 14.6 m and 19.5 m long respectively, about 0.6 m high and 1 m broad intersecting at their mid points. At that time the Great Stone had suffered considerably from surface quarrying. He described the ancient road, via regia, surviving in this section as an old track that had continued in use to access the woods and the crofts further to the north and northwest. It was less than 1.8 m (6 feet) wide, with a solid, well preserved base, almost level the whole way, being formed as a shelf in the brow of the hillside. The Bishop's Cross and the Great Stone lay just to the north side of the road. The OS site visit in 1961 could not locate either the Great Stone or the cross. At that time the dykes forming the northeast boundary of the Bishop's Lands were well preserved on the north side, but in a ruinous condition elsewhere. The RCAHMS visited the site in September 2001 and recorded the cross shaped arrangement of drystone walls as circa 1 m in thickness by 0.5 m in height, with one wall measuring circa 23 m in length from northwest to southeast, the other 14.5 m from northeast to southwest, situated on a stony, southwest facing slope, lying within a small clearing in mature conifer woodland. The RCAHMS concluded that the features previously identified as the medieval boundary markers and the Bishop's Cross had potentially been misidentified, suggesting instead that the cross may have been a sheep shelter, with the actual cross probably on the east side of the hill, potentially remembered in the place name, Corsehill. The boundary marker of the Great Stone could not be identified.
Last Update15/02/2023
Updated Bycpalmer
CompilerJN
Date of Compilation15/01/2021

Google Map for NJ81SW0307

National Grid Reference: NJ 8438 1187



Event Details


Excavations and Surveys


Artefact and Ecofact

Ecofact

Samples
Palynology
Ecofact Notes

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
STONESMARKERSITE OFB100
CROSSESSTONEREMAINS OFD100
STONESBOUNDARYSITE OFC100
CROSSESBOUNDARYREMAINS OFE100
ROADS REMAINS OFF100
SHELTERS SHEEPA100