Angus HER - NO33SW0007 - HURLY HAWKIN

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Main Details

Primary ReferenceNO33SW0007
NameHURLY HAWKIN
NRHE Card No.NO33SW7
NRHE Numlink 32052
HES SM No. 140
HES LB No. NULL
Site Form Standing Structure
Site Condition Incomplete
Details Multi-period prehistoric site. Hurly Hawkin is a small promontory, formed by cutting off a steep-sided narrow piece of land where two streams join. It is only easily approached from the north, now a well-kept lawn. It has been used successively as the location of a palisaded enclosure, a promontory fort, a broch and souterrain, all apparently of one phase each, although tree root damage hindered interpretation. Allegedly the site of the palace of King Alexander I 'near Invergowrie', according to the OSA, which also records that persons unknown had dug at the site and found ashes and 'an iron spur, of the kind long ago worn'. The promontory is accordingly marked '(Site of) Supposed palace of Alexander I 12th century' on the OS maps until those of the late 20th century. Jervise discovered that the forester of Lord Gray, the landowner, had found some bones and 'rings of iron and bronze' in another unrecorded investigation. Jervise himself excavated the site, looking for remains of the palace, over two days in March 1865. He exposed the broch, but only tentatively identified it as such, as no others were known at the time outside of Shetland. He excavated all around the interior wall and put two trenches across the floor at right angles to each other. An inserted burial was discovered, with a deposit of charcoal containing several fragile bronze cup-headed pins to its south and west. Jervise's investigation shows that the broch appears to have been re-used as a midden. He described a variety of animal remains (including large parts of the skeleton of a horse), burnt barley, a burnt wooden object, an unfinished whorl, pieces of metal and further human remains. All were found in the broch interior, which Jervise described as 'turned over at a former period' and so he was unable to provide stratigraphical information. Jervise also noted the ditch to the north, which he considered artificial and inaccurately sited the entrance to the broch in the north-west, when he had probably exposed a mural chamber. Gordon Childe interpreted the site as an outlier of the ring-fort tradition of central Perthshire. The site was further excavated by D. B. Taylor between 1958 and 1967. This produced a sequence of occupation (based on structural evidence alone), a palisaded enclosure was the earliest usage of the site, followed by the promontory fort, itself followed by the broch which partially overlies it. The inner ditch of the fort was then infilled and the souterrain and its courtyard built from the stones of the broch. Finally the souterrain entrance was blocked and the courtyard destroyed during a fifth occupation. The palisaded enclosure or timber stockade was discovered below the floor of the broch and its line continued underneath the broch wall to the west. Thirty-one postholes, 0.22m in diameter, mostly in a curved line and 0.24m apart, were discovered, including one linking with a rectangular pit, interpreted as a stockade or palisade with a possible entrance. Their close proximity and the ground sloping away from them to the south-east make identification as a hut extremely unlikely. No palisade trench was discovered. The relationship to the promontory fort is unclear, the excavator concluded that the palisade was earlier because its situation within the defences of the fort would make such a structure unnecessary. The promontory fort, its existence suggested by R. B. K. Stevenson, was formed by a double set of massive banks and ditches. It was discovered under the northern sector of the broch wall where the outer face was 0.6m higher than the inner face. Part of the bank was discovered to be still 0.8m deep below the wall. The inner ditch, later occupied by the souterrain, was 6.5m wide and was 2.5m deep below ground level. The outer ditch was 5.1m wide and 1.7m deep below the ground level. The ditches possibly ran into each other at the western side. Several possible postholes were found in the interior, but with no recognisable pattern. The interior appeared to have been levelled by the builders of the broch. Outside the broch, paving remains hints at a roadway around the broch to the entrance. The interior was roughly circular, 12.48m north-south x 12.6m east-west. The remains of paving survived, especially in the north-east quadrant. Above this was a layer, up to 50mm deep, of burnt material, possibly roofing material. Several postholes which the paving aligned with were discovered, interpreted as roofing supports, a range of buildings along the inner face of the wall, and an extension to the entrance passage. The remains of a kerbed hearth was discovered slightly off centre and the remains of a possible water tank nearby. The finds related to these structures are undiagnostic, a bone mount with three perforations, a bone needle, rubbing stone, spindle-whorl, piece of hematite and two pieces of charred wood, one with two drilled holes. The broch was opened on all quadrants apart from the south-east which is still covered by trees. The denuded walls were exposed, as well as a partially paved inner courtyard. The outer wall face had a number of foundation slabs and boulders and holes for boulders now missing. The inner face was better preserved, surviving at foundation height except in the east and west where it was 1m high. Little core material was found, apart from by the mural chamber in the east and a cup and ring-marked slab, used as the entrance to a wall-chamber (shown as the entrance by Jervise) found between the faces at the north-west. This material could have been used in the construction of the souterrain, or a clay and rubble core, as at Crosskirk, Caithness, could have been used. The entrance was found at the south-west, represented by paving and lower courses of stones. A socket for a door was discovered by a sill stone at the entrance. The eastern mural chamber, in an area of 1m high wall preservation, was 1.4m wide. No steps remained, but this could have been the base of the stairway. One of the paving stones on the floor was the lower stone of a sandstone saddle-quern. The disturbed interior produced a bronze ring-headed pin, part of a bronze ribbed bracelet, a piece of bronze chain, part of a glass bangle, a bone toggle, a bronze snake armlet, a bronze harness mount and studs, bronze rings, a patera handle, various nails and rivets and evidence of bronze and iron casting. Various tools, both of metal and bone, a lead wright and other 'obscure' objects were also recovered. The floor of the broch yielded similar metal and glass-work, parts of a bronze pin, a harness-mount, bracelet, spiral ring, fragments of a pan, an iron nail and a lead weight, a glass bangle, glass ball, a whetstone, a jet pinhead and bone tool. However, there were 50 stone discs of unknown purpose recovered from the floor. The filling of the broch wall, post-dating the broch, contained fragments of human bone, two sherds of samian ware and two sherds of native ware. The dating evidence ranges for the 1st-3rd centuries AD, but was intermixed with a Late Bronze Age pin and medieval and 17th century pottery and glass and modern glass. The souterrain, of the 'Angus' type, built in the inner ditch of the promontory fort, was investigated by three trenches. It stood to a height of 1.5m, was 2.2m wide, paved and had corbelling and some displaced roof slabs. A soil layer indicated disuse before destruction or collapse. The floor was removed in the westernmost trench which revealed that the ditch of the fort had been infilled to the required width was reached, then the sides of the ditch were removed and foundation boulders and corbelling of the souterrain constructed. The entrance was discovered at the west, by the north wall, narrowed by slabs at right angles to the walls to 0.84m. The floor was paved and did not slope. The passage had been blocked by carefully laid horizontal slabs. A cup-marked boulder and a hearth were found at the entrance, with a paved courtyard and possible evidence of a hut. A platform, of unknown use and extent, to the west of the second ditch was partially uncovered, but the remainder was covered by trees. The third trench, to find the end of the souterrain, uncovered another cup-marked stone. The souterrain was circa 29.4m long. There was no indication of a side entrance. From the floor of the souterrain were a bronze finger ring, part of an iron knife, a piece of iron, parts of a crucible for bronze casting, a whetstone and a stone disc. The infill produced another bronze ring, similar to the one from the floor, a piece of bronze sheet, an iron nail fragment and a piece of native ware. Later finds included a bronze strap-end of Dark Age date (9th century) and some medieval pottery, from the 14-15th centuries, including part of an imported knight jug. The entrance to the souterrain produced a larger number of stone objects, five whetstones, pottery, whorls and stone discs. The blocking produced further stone items, another whetstone, more discs and an iron bar and piece of slag. Two sherds of pottery, one native, the other a counter made of samian ware were recovered from the blocking. The courtyard produced more native and samian pottery (re-used as rubbers), iron nails, part of a sickle, several whetstones and other stone tools, including more stone discs. A sherd of a medieval jug and some modern glass were also discovered in the courtyard. The pottery is similar to that found at Ardestie and Carlungie, probably circa 2nd century.
Last Update04/03/2020
Updated Bycherbert
Compiler 
Date of Compilation 

Google Map for NO33SW0007

National Grid Reference: NO 3320 3280



Event Details

Event DateEvent TypeOASIS ID
1865 Excavation
1958 Excavation
1999 Excavation

Excavations and Surveys

Date MDate YTypeDurationDirector / OrganisationAuspicesFundExtent
 1958 9DB TAYLOR   
 1865  Andrew Jervise   
    Forester- unknown date   
    Persons and date unknown   

Artefact and Ecofact

Date MDate YArtefact TypeFinderRecovery MethodConditionStorage LocationAccess No.
 1958 BONE PLATE Excavation National Museum of Scotland  
   BRONZE FINGER-RING Excavation  
   PATERA HANDLE Excavation  

Ecofact

Samples
Palynology
Ecofact Notes

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
ENCLOSURES PALISADEDB100
POST-HOLES REMAINS OFC100
STONES CUP-MARKEDR100
STONESCUP & RINGCUP-MARKEDS100
BURIALSHUMAN T100
BURIALS HORSEU100
TUSKS BOARV100
TEETH ANIMALW100
BONES SHEEPX100
SHELLS COCKLEY100
SHELLS MUSSELZ100
SPINDLE-WHORLS UNFINISHEDAA100
GRAIN BARLEYBB100
MIDDENS SITE OFCC100
HEARTHS  DD100
POST-HOLES  EE100
WHETSTONES  FF100
DISCSSANDSTONE GG100
NAILSIRON HH100
SLAGIRON II100
CRUCIBLES  JJ100
SICKLESIRON KK100
BALLSGLASSDECORATEDLL100
BRACELETSGLASS MM100
BRACELETSBRONZESERPENTNN100
QUERN-STONESROTARY OO100
FLINTS  PP100
PINSBRONZE QQ100
STRAP-ENDSBRONZE RR100
FORTSPROMONTORYREMAINS OFA100
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