Aberdeenshire HER - NK05NE0003 - BURGH OF RATTRAY

Main Details

Primary ReferenceNK05NE0003
NameBURGH OF RATTRAY
NMRS Card No.NK05NE3
NMRS Numlink21091
Site Form Documentary Record Only
Site Condition Destroyed
Details Site of the Burgh of Rattray. Its earliest mention was in connection with a gift of wax to St Mary's Chapel between 1214 and 1233. The parishes of Crimond and Lonmay formed the Lordship of Rattray that was part of the pre-feudal Lordship of Buchan, held by Celtic mormaers (regional rulers) for several centuries before William Comyn acquired the lands through his marriage to Margaret, heiress of the last Celtic earl, circa 1211-14. Following the harrying of Buchan by Robert the Bruce in 1308, part of the forfeited Comyn estate was granted to Archibald Douglas. Reference in a document of 1324 to a harbour suggests a Comyn sea-going settlement, possibly a burgh, by the mid 13th century. It was created a Royal Burgh in March 1563, but by 1654 the harbour was silting up and by 1732 there was hardly a vestige of the town remaining. In 1888 only one house remained and it was used as a cattle shed. It would appear likely that the burgh extended between the church and the castle, and that the existing road may be on or near the line of the original road or path. In the medieval period the Loch of Strathbeg was an inlet of the sea, sheltered by a single bar to the northeast and entered at the east point, nearest to Castle Hill. The final blocking of the inlet occurred in 1720 in a single storm. Dune accretion continued such that the present shoreline is further east than in the medieval period. By 1888 only one house remains, that being used as a cattle shed. Large scale trial trenching was carried out between 1985 and 1990 which revealed a complex suite of evidence of medieval date, extending for 55m from the Chapel of St Mary (NK05NE0002) to the Castle Hill (NK05NE0004). The work revealed possible medieval occupation floors. and the range of pottery found during the excavation shows that the burgh was active throughout the 13th-15th Centuries. A pottery kiln was found near the chapel with some kiln furniture, and pottery at all stages of production. The trenching in 1988 near the base of the castle mound recorded traces of Bronze Age cultivation and a burnt wooden hurdle (possibly from a wattle field boundary beneath the medieval dune. They were dated to 1520 - 1260 BC. Metal-detecting, by permission of Historic Scotland, between 2001-2007 has recovered a number of artefacts in the fields to the north and east of the church. These include coins, buckles, buttons, hooks, part of a spoon, a glass bead, lace chapes and bronze handles.
Last Update20/06/2023

National Grid Reference: NK 0862 5769


Easting: 326380, Northing: 809493

Compiler 
Date of Compilation 

Event Details

Event DateEvent Type
1905 Excavation
1905 Excavation
1905 Metal Detecting
1905 Metal Detecting

Excavations and Surveys

Date MDate YTypeDurationDirector / OrganisationAuspicesFundExtent
 1985  J C MURRAY & H K MURRAY SDD 
 1989  J C MURRAY & H C MURRAY SDD 

Artefact and Ecofact

Date MDate YArtefact TypeFinderRecovery MethodConditionStorage LocationAccess No.
 2001COINS  Metal Detecting TT.71/01
 1985MEDIEVAL POTTERY  Excavation Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums  
 1985FLINTS  Excavation Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums  
 1985NEOLITHIC POTTERY  Excavation Aberdeen Art Gallery & Museums  

Ecofact

Samples 
Palynology 
Ecofact Notes 

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
BURGHSROYALSITE OFE100
BUILDINGS CLAY-MORTAREDF100
DITCHESBOUNDARYREMAINS OFG100
PITSPOST H100
KILNSPOTTERY I100
POTTERY  J100
PLOUGH-MARKS REMAINS OFA100
FENCESPOST & WATTLEREMAINS OFB100
FLINTS  C100
POTTERY  D100
RIG & FURROW  K100
FURNITUREKILN L100
POTTERY GRIMSTON-WAREM100
DICEBONE N100
GAMING-BOARDSPOTTERY O100
ARROWHEADSIRON P100
BROOCHESBRONZE Q100
BUTTONSMETAL S100
CHAPESLACEREMAINS OFT100
BEADSGLASSBLUEU100
BUCKLES REMAINS OFV100
HANDLESMETALREMAINS OFW100
SPOONS REMAINS OFX100
HOOKS REMAINS OFY100
COINS  R100
ARD-MARKS  Z100

Google Map for NK05NE0003


National Status

National Status
Scheduled (under AM + Arch Area Act 1979)

Regional Status


Photo Details

SourceReferencePhoto TypeFilm TypeDate
CUCBHB 93-4 Air-oblique Black & White 01/08/1971
AASAAS/77/03/RB/5-6/S6/24 Air-oblique Black & White  
CUCBRE 47 Air-oblique Black & White 02/08/1974
CUCK17 Y219-220 Air-oblique Black & White 01/08/1971
CUCBVE 53 Air-oblique Black & White 26/07/1975
AASAAS/83/16/S9/2-4 Air-oblique Black & White 09/08/1983
AASAAS/83/09/S4/27 Air-oblique Black & White 21/07/1983
AASAAS/87/03/S3/18-22 Air-oblique Black & White 02/09/1987
AASAAS/89/10/S31/4-9,11-4 Air-oblique Black & White 28/07/1989
AASAAS/93/15/G30/31 Air-oblique Black & White 11/11/1993
AASAAS/83/16/S9/4 Air-oblique Black & White 09/08/1983
AASAAS/79/4/CT4-9 Air-oblique Colour Transparency 05/07/1979
AASAAS/89/10/CT2-5,8-10,14-6 Air-oblique Colour Transparency 28/07/1989
AASAAS/89/10/CT20-21,35 Air-oblique Colour Transparency 28/07/1989
AASAAS/GR/88/CT517-523 Ground Colour Transparency 01/01/1988

Bibliographic Detail

Bib Ref NoTitleAuthorDateOthersEditorPublishedDetailsDate MDate Y
01525T BUCHAN FC 5(1898-1901)192-02J MILNE1901   198-202 1901
00512EVENING EXPRESS 0  ABERDEEN25/07/85 1985
01768PRESS & JOURNAL 1  ABERDEEN31/07/86 1986
01768PRESS & JOURNAL 1  ABERDEEN19/08/86 1986
00142BUCHAN OBSERVER 0   05/08/86 1986
01526RATTRAY - INTERIM REPORTJC MURRAY1985Y  INTERIM REPORT 1985
08091EVIDENCE OF AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITY OF THE LATER 2NDH. K. MURRAY1992Y PSAS 122 (1992) pp.113-125pp.113-125 1992
10864THE MEDIEVAL BURGH OF RATTRAY: INTERIM REPORT 1988HK MURRAY1988Y  Interim report 1998

Location

Historic Administrative Area Name Crimond
Positional Accuracy Location only
Buffer Zone 15-20m
Buffer Type Bespoke
Capture Scale Unknown
Spatial Feature Type Polygon: Unknown Extent

Environment

Constraints No access.
Altitude10
Geology 
Topography Ridge
Aspect 1360
Aspect 2 Open
Current Land Use Arable
Vegetation Barley
Soil Type3s
Hydrology 

Measurements

PlanY
Shape 1
Shape 2
Diameter 
Length 
Width 
Thickness 
Depth 
Area 
Height 

Historic Land Use


Period Details

PeriodOrderProbabilityRadiocarbon DatesDate BuiltDate of DestructionDate of Loss
Medieval (1100 - 1560 AD) A100    
Bronze Age (2200 BC - 800 BC) B1001520 BC - 1260 BC   

Period Notes

Period Notes First recorded in 1220; became a Royal Burgh in 1564; badly silted by 1654; 1720 storm sealed the river from the sea, creating the Loch of Strathbeg; burgh's Bartholomew Fair continued to be held until 1869. Only one house remained by1888. RC dates: GU-2719 from charcoal from the collapsed fence of a field system 3130 BP (Err: 50) - 1520-1260 cal BC

Architect Details

Architect Details

Maritime Archaeology

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