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57°21′37″N 6°25′33″W / 57.360355°N 6.425767°W / 57.360355; -6.425767

Dun Beag
Dun Beag
Dun Beag is located in Isle of Skye
Dun Beag
Dun Beag shown within the Isle of Skye, Scotland
LocationSkye
Coordinates57°21′37″N 6°25′33″W / 57.360355°N 6.425767°W / 57.360355; -6.425767
TypeBroch
History
PeriodsIron Age
Site notes
OwnershipHistoric Environment Scotland
Public accessYes

Dun Beag is an iron-age broch located about 1 kilometre northwest of the village of Struan on the west coast of the island of Skye, in Scotland.

Description

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Dun Beag (grid reference NG339386) is situated at the north end of a small rocky knoll.[1] The broch consists of a drystone tower with a diameter of around 18.6 metres with walls about 4 metres thick at the base.[1] The broch currently stands to a maximum height of 2 metres.[2]

The interior has a diameter of about 11 metres, and the entrance is on the east side.[2] Internally three openings are visible in the broch wall.[2] One leads to a small chamber; a second leads to a long narrow gallery within the wall; and a third leads to the stone stair of which some twenty steps survive.[2]

History

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The broch was visited by Thomas Pennant in 1772, and it was still a substantial structure, with a height of perhaps 4 metres.[1] The following year a broch near Ullinish, which was probably Dun Beag, was visited by Samuel Johnson and James Boswell during their Tour to the Hebrides.[1] Around half of its wall height has been lost since the 18th century.[1]

The broch was excavated by the Countess Vincent Baillet de Latour between 1914 and 1920.[1] Some 200 tons of earth and stones were removed from the broch and all the soil was sifted through the excavators' fingers.[1] The standard of recording and publication was poor.[1] Finds included many stone implements and utensils, a gold ring, bronze objects, a piece of folded sheet lead, iron and glass objects, a borer of bone, a pick made from an antler, much pottery and a stone cup.[1] Several hundred glass beads were found although they are not thought to be prehistoric.[1] Coins of Henry II, Edward I, James VI, George II and George III have been discovered, and it is possible that the broch was in use until comparatively recently.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Historic Environment Scotland. "Skye, Dun Beag (11062)". Canmore. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d "Dun Beag". Historic Scotland. Retrieved 13 February 2014.
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