The group has visited several promontory forts, so I thought
a bit of background information might be useful.
Promontory forts are a feature of the landscape on many of
the west-facing coastlines of the British Isles and they can also be found in
Iberia and NW France. The indented coastline is a necessary common factor, but
it may be that these widespread communities had something else in common that
required them to build these forts. The vast majority of excavated sites have
provided evidence of activity during the Iron Age, but precise dates are rare
(an exception being Gob Eirer, Lewis which was radiocarbon dated to 600-500
BC).
Promontory
forts are the largest group of forts in Atlantic Scotland, but they are
not a homogeneous settlement type, distinct from the rest of the regional
settlement pattern, but instead share characteristics with inland settlements.
The most common form is the univallate type, featuring a
simple stone wall and usually enclosing less than one hectare. In some cases
(e.g. Rubh an Dunain), features such as intra-mural galleries, borrowed from
complex Atlantic roundhouses, have been incorporated into the wall. At the
Broch of Burland in Shetland, a complex Atlantic roundhouse has been built on a
small promontory and protected by multiple banks and ditches.
At least
50 promontory forts have been recorded along the Galloway coast, but only a
handful have been excavated. Excavations at Carghidown demonstrated sporadic
occupation over a short period during the late first millennium BC or early
first millennium AD. Lead beads were discovered during the
excavation, suggesting that the inhabitants were of some status within
the local social hierarchy. The excavation also demonstrated that the site was only
formally enclosed during the latter stages of its occupation and that within a
year or two of this act of enclosure the ramparts were violently thrown down,
the repair and construction of buildings within the settlement was abruptly
halted and occupation ceased.
Although
one or two hut platforms have occasionally been found within promontory forts,
it seems unlikely that they were permanent domestic residences. Some of the
larger enclosures could have performed a similar function to that of inland forts,
offering temporary shelter to people and livestock, but many were little more
than jagged outcrops of bare rock.
One
interesting theory is that the more accessible sites were trading posts, with
the function of the wall being to protect high value merchandise. For this
theory to be valid, there would have to be a convenient mooring point nearby.
Alternatively, a promontory fort may have been built to enable the local
population to get advanced warning of the visit of a trading vessel to the
local port.
In
his study of promontory forts in northern Scotland, Lamb has noted that the
majority of sites could not be simply explained as defensive or domestic
locations and therefore considered them to have a social significance beyond
the humdrum activities of everyday life. It is known that liminal places, such
as the interface between land and sea, were particularly favoured as sites for
communing with the supernatural, so some authors have suggested that promontory
forts may have functioned primarily as places of ritual observance and worship.
Bibliography
Cunliffe,
B.W. Facing the Ocean: The Atlantic and its Peoples, 8000 BC to AD 1500
(2001)
Harding,
D.W. The Iron Age in Northern Britain (2004)
Henderson,
Jon C. The Atlantic Iron Age (2007)
Lamb,
R.G. Iron-Age Promontory Forts in the Northern Isles (1980)
Toolis,
Ronan Intermittent occupation and forced abandonment: excavation of an Iron
Age promontory fort at Carghidown, Dumfries and Galloway, Proc Soc Antiq
Scot. 137 (2007) 265-318
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