Monument record 1933 - AIRIGH-MHUILINN, SOUTH UIST

Summary

Cleared township shown on 1st ed OS map, centred on NF 741 268, surveyed by Sheffield University 1993

Location

Grid reference NF 741 268 (point)
Map sheet NF72NW
Island South Uist
Parish SOUTH UIST, Western Isles

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

NF72NW 28 centred on 741 268

(previously recorded at NF 745 266 [NGR of name on 1:10000 map])

Airidh-Mhuilinn [name changed to Airigh-Mhuilinn on later editions of OS maps - at NF 745 266 on OS 1:10,000 map, 1971]: A green mound on which there are a number of ruins, one of which is pointed out as being the birthplace of Flora McDonald [in 1722].
Name Book, Inverness-shire (Hebrides), 1878

Airigh-Mhuilinn was surveyed by students from Sheffield University in 1993. Here are the ruins of fifteen pre-Clearance dwellings, some with associated byres or outhouses and yards or gardens. The houses are located on small areas of higher, drier land in a zone dissected by water-courses and boggy ground, surrounded by more extensive dry ridges which were used for cultivation. The sketch plan has picked up a very extensive pattern of spade-ridges, produced by the cas-chrom or foot-plough, and the metre-wide ridges last used for potatoes may be distinguished from the 1.5m wide ridges on which cereals were grown. There are also smaller potato-patches, dug by crofters in more recent times. What is probably the most important structure is a large rectangular walled enclosure, originally built in orthostatic 'post and panel' style and later refurbished. If this was the tacksman's cattle enclosure, there might be four possible birthplaces for Flora McDonald - the house within the enclosure, the house incorporated into its SW corner, and the two sizeable houses immediately outside the enclosure, one to the N, the other to the E.
MS 595/9

Fifteen unroofed buildings and two enclosures are depicted on the 1st edition of the OS 6-inch map (Inverness-shire, Hebrides, South Uist 1881, sheet lv). One roofed, one partially roofed, seven unroofed buildings and three enclosures are shown on the current edition of the OS 1:10000 map (1971).
Information from RCAHMS (SAH) 20 May 1997

NF 740 270 (centre). A landscape survey of the archaeological remains in the 19th-century township of Milton, South Uist, was carried out in July 1997. The work focused on the machair and blacklands to the W of the island. The hills to the E were not intensively surveyed but were examined briefly. Over 1200 separate features were identified in the machair and blacklands area. These ranged from formal cairns to clearance cairns, settlement remains, platforms, trackways, field walls and extensive cultivation rigs. In the hills a complex series of large dykes and several shielings were identified. The focus upon one township and integration with ongoing excavation and survey in the settlement core has contributed to our uncerstanding of alterations in the structure of the agricultural landscape in Milton township from the medieval period through to the present day. This includes hints of a pre-run-rig system of enclosures as well as run-rig and crofting landscapes.
Full details have been lodged with the NMRS.
Sponsors: HS, Earthwatch
Symonds, Lund and Warren 1998, 101

NF 741 269 (centre). In 1997 (misprint in DES, should read 1996) excavation and geophysical survey were carried out in the settlement at Airigh Mhuillinn (see DES 1996, 107). The interior of a blackhouse was fully excavated. A small structure containing a corn dryer was also partially excavated.
Excavation inside the blackhouse revealed internal drains and divisions, and a variety of ceramic, glass and metal artefacts, dating from 1800-30. Some of the pottery was of high quality, and much had been imported from Stoke-on-Trent and Glasgow. Excavation in the adjoining kailyard revealed a large surface paved with beach cobbles, and a haystack base. Samples were taken for phosphate analysis and environmental processing.
Sponsors: Society of Antiquaries for Scotland, Earthwatch
Symonds, J 1998, 101

NF 741 269 (centre) In June and July 2000 a further season of excavation and field survey was conducted at Airigh Mhuilinn. Excavation of House J, the fifth blackhouse to be completely excavated since 1996 (DES 1998, 101), exposed the remains of a substantial stone structure. The structure was sub-rectangular, with rounded end walls and internal dimensions of c 16.2 x 3.8m. The walls were c 1-1.4m thick, and comprised an inner and outer skin of undressed gneiss boulders with a tempered-earth core. A single doorway (c 0.75m wide) was located on the W side of the house, c 5.5m from the S end.
The structure was aligned N-S,and had been carefully sited to make use of a natural slope on a hummock of morainic drift. In its original form the house had been divided into three rooms. The house was entered through the byre area (c 5.15 x 3.8m) at the foot of the slope. A stone-capped drain ran N-S down the centre of the byre, emptying through a hole in the end wall. The byre was separated form the main living area of the house by a short partition wall. Beyond this, to the N, the main living room (c 8 x 3.8m) contained the remains of a central hearth. At the extreme N end of the house a smaller area (c3 x 3.8m) had been demarcated as a sleeping area. Excavated finds from the floor deposits of the living area and byre include several glass beads, some of which may have derived from a rosary, and ceramics dating from the 1820s. A programme of bulk enviromental and geochemical (phosphate and magnetic susceptibility) sampling was undertaken on floor deposits within the house and byre. The results of this work are being analysed.
After abandonment parts of the main structure were heavily robbed. A small V-shaped setting of stones (c 2.88 x 1.83m at base) was laid out in the former living area, presumably to serve as a lambing pen. The house and byre were bisected NW-SE by a line of stones that supported wooden posts and a barbed-wire fence, when the area was made over to croft land in 1917.
A handful of sherds of undiagnostic coarse gneiss-tempered pottery were found in shallow depressions in the subsoil/bedrock beside the blackhouse. These finds may be examples of handmade 19th-century pottery (Craggan-type ware) associated with the use of the house, or alternatively may indicate prehistoric or medieval activity on the site. One fragment of a snapped flint blade was recovered from a test trench to the E of the blackhouse excavation.
A corn-drying kiln butting up against the N wall of the blackhouse was also excavated. This ancillary structure (4.3 x 2.2m internally) had been constructed at some point during the primary occupation of the blackhouse. This corn dryer had randomly coursed stone walls (c 0.7m thick) on the N side. These walls thickened to include rubble and clay packing in the area surrounding the actual kiln. The fuel had been badly robbed, but a small circular bowl (diamter c. 0.9m at top, 0.3m at base) survived. Bulk environmental samples were taken from the bowl and threshing floor within the structure, and are in the process of being analysed.
Sponsors: Boston University, Earthwatch
Symonds, J, Badcock, A, Parsons, V (ARCUS), Brighton, S


J Symonds, 1996, Discovery and Excavation, Scotland (Bibliographic reference). SWE38159.

Council for Scottish Archaeology, 1998, Discovery and Excavation in Scotland (Bibliographic reference). SWE41173.

Name Book (County), 1998, Name Books of the Ordnance Survey, No. 13, p. 68 (Unpublished document). SWE4254.

Council for Scottish Archaeology, 2000, Discovery and Excavation in Scotland (Bibliographic reference). SWE41184.

Sources/Archives (4)

  • --- Bibliographic reference: J Symonds. 1996. Discovery and Excavation, Scotland. 107.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: Council for Scottish Archaeology. 1998. Discovery and Excavation in Scotland.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: Council for Scottish Archaeology. 2000. Discovery and Excavation in Scotland. New Series, Volume 1.
  • --- Unpublished document: Name Book (County). 1998. Name Books of the Ordnance Survey. No. 13, p. 68.

Finds (0)

Protected Status/Designation

  • None recorded

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

Related Events/Activities (1)

Record last edited

Jul 28 2005 2:24PM

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