Monument record 511 - ST KILDA, TIGH AN T-SITHICHE

Summary

Souterrain

Location

Grid reference NF 10010 99410 (point)
Map sheet NF19NW
Island Hirta, St Kilda
Parish HARRIS, Western Isles

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

NF19NW 7 1001 994.

(NF 10019941) Earth House (NR)
OS 6"map, annotated by J Mathieson (1928)

The earth-house 'Tigh an t'sithiche' (House of the Fairies) was accidentally discovered c 1844, and opened by Sands (J Sands 1878) in 1876, who stated it was 25ft long, 3ft 8ins wide and c 4ft high, with walls of large stones covered by a roof of flat stones and earth. It was further investigated by Kearton (R Kearton 1897) and Mackenzie in 1896, and by Mathieson (J Mathieson 1928) and Cockburn in 1928, the latter excavation proving that the earth-house extended a further 9ft (total 34ft).
Over a foot of peat-ash and soot covered a paved floor (with a drain beneath) in which were found coarse potsherds, hammerstones, shells, animal bones, etc. Finds made by Kearton included a Viking iron spearhead, stone net sinkers (or loom weights), querns, stone lamps, etc. (now in NMAS {PSAS 1878, 1897 and 1912} - ACC.NO. AC 130-2).
Dunlop (M Dunlop 1938) classifies the 'Fairy House' as a 'forecourt monument' Ne/BA, camparable with others in Europe
J Sands 1878; R Kearton 1897; J Mathieson 1928; M Dunlop 1938; Proc Soc Antiq Scot 1878, 1897 and 1912.

This souterrain is as described above; but there is no evidence at all of a forecourt (M Dunlop 1938).
The structure is 9.5m long overall, 3.0m of which is still covered at the rear.
Visited by OS (JLD) 7 August 1967.

This is probably the 'allee converte' (passage grave) noted by Somerville.
T B Somerville 1912. D C Heggie 1981; Information from J L Davidson
20 September 1989.

Taigh an t-Sithiche ('House of the Fairies') lies just N of the burial-ground on the strip previously belonging to House 11. Some time after its discovery in about 1844, Sands carried out a detailed investigation. He reported that it was '25 feet (7.62m) long by about 3 feet 8 inches (1.12m) wide and about 4 feet (1.22m) high. The stones with which it is built are large, and the massive walls converge towards the top, so that lintels can be placed on them to form a roof. At a right angle to the house is what I thought to be a passage, but the men declared it to be a crupa or bedplace.' In a deposit of peat- or turf-ash on the floor he found bones of the animals and birds, shells, coarse pottery, and stone implements, some used for pounding and some, as he thought, as axes or cleavers. Under the floor there was a drain. Kearton and Mackenzie also cleared out and 'restored' the structure, finding among other things an iron spearhead. Further excavations were conducted in 1927 by Mathieson and in 1974 by P R Ritchie.
The souterrain survives much as Sands described it: an almost straight subterranean passage aligned NW-SE and 7.6m in length. At about halfway there is a passage branching 1.83m to the NE. The entrance of this shorter passage has a width of only 0.66m and a height of 0.94m, dimensions usually associated with access to wall-beds. The walls are less regular than those of the main passage. Mathieson considered that there were similar opposed lateral chambers towards the SE end, but the evidence for further chambers is inconclusive. It is from this end that the main passage is now entered rather than through the roof as in Sands's day), and the masonry around the opening indicates the likelihood of cross-walls in this position. The walls of the main passage continue for a further 2.5m to the SE, showing that the passage was originally longer in that direction.
It is also likely that the main passage was longer at the N end where it now finishes with a rough face of earth and stones which lies almost directly beneath the strip boundary. It probably ended beneath, or possibly beyond, Cleit 70 (NF19NW 21.23), which stands on the other side of that boundary, the passage having perhaps been broken into and infilled during the construction of the boundary dyke.
Some of the finds from the excavations have been deposited in the Royal Museum of Scotland, Queen Street, Edinburgh. A few decorated potsherds are considered to be of standard Iron Age type comparable with pottery found at Clettraval and elsewhere in the Hebrides.
J Sands 1878; PSAS 1878; R Kearton 1897; PSAS 1897; PSAS 1912; J Mathieson 1928; RCAHMS 1928; K Williamson and J M Boyd 1960; M Buchanan 1983; G P Stell and M Harmon 1988.

Dunlop classifies this as a 'forecourt monument' of Neolithic/Bronze Age date, comparable with others in Europe.
M Dunlop 1938.

This structure is 9.5m long overall, 3m is still covered at the rear. There is no evidence at all of a forecourt. Surveyed at 1:10,560. Visited by OS (JLD) 7 August 1967.

NF 100 994 Two trenches, with a combined area of 114m2, were opened in June and July 2004 immediately S and E of the souterrain known as the Fairy House in the Village, in order to assess the extent of earlier investigations and the potential for undisturbed archaeology around the souterrain.
Trench 1, to the S, established the position of an earlier trench, and also the presence of walling and a built platform curving around the southern end of the souterrain, with associated later prehistoric deposits.
Trench 2, to the E, uncovered substantial wall lines and associated deposits, also of late prehistoric date. The wall lines may relate to a previously unknown side passage or chamber to the souterrain, and to a monumental curvilinear structure, possibly an Atlantic roundhouse. The area in the eastern part of the trench had been cultivated in the 19th century, and a very slight stone wall demarcated the cultivated ground from the undisturbed area.
Geophysical survey (resistivity and gradiometer) was conducted over a largr transect centred on the burial ground; numerous anomalies, including possible structures, were identified. Topographic survey was carried out over part of the same transect. The work was carried out with the assistance of NTS Work Party volunteers.
Report lodged with the NMRS.
Sponsor: NTS
Carruthers, Lelong, Maguire and Shearer 2004, 136


PSAS, 1876-8, Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 185 (Bibliographic reference). SWE8946.

J Sands, 1876-8, Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 186-7 illust, 187 (Bibliographic reference). SWE6187.

PSAS, 1896-7, Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 153-4 (Bibliographic reference). SWE11019.

R Kearton, 1897, With Nature and a Camera, 13 (Bibliographic reference). SWE12869.

PSAS, 1911-12, Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 373 (Bibliographic reference). SWE9079.

B Somerville, 1912b, J Roy Anthrop Inst, 50-2 (Bibliographic reference). SWE7993.

J Mathieson, 1927-8, Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 125-6 fig. 2, 3 (Bibliographic reference). SWE5190.

RCAHMS, 1928, The RCAHMCS 9th Report & Inventory: Outer Hebrides, Skye and the Small Isles, 46, no. 158 (Bibliographic reference). SWE5587.

M Dunlop, 1938, Trans Lancashire Cheshire Antiq Soc, 25-6 plan (Bibliographic reference). SWE12870.

D C Heggie, 1981, Megalithic Science: ancient mathematics and astronomy in north-west Europe, 122 (Bibliographic reference). SWE9604.

M Buchanan, 1983, St Kilda: a photographic album, 13 (Bibliographic reference). SWE2699.

G P and M Stell and Harman, 1988, Buildings of St Kilda, 48-9, no. 23 (Bibliographic reference). SWE8255.

Council for Scottish Archaeology, 2004, Discovery and Excavation in Scotland (Bibliographic reference). SWE41193.

Sources/Archives (13)

  • --- Bibliographic reference: PSAS. 1896-7. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 31. 5-6, 78-80, 104-110, 153-. 153-4.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: R Kearton. 1897. With Nature and a Camera. 13.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: M Dunlop. 1938. Trans Lancashire Cheshire Antiq Soc. 53. 25-6 plan.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: M Buchanan. 1983. St Kilda: a photographic album. 13.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: Council for Scottish Archaeology. 2004. Discovery and Excavation in Scotland. New Series, Volume 5.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: J Mathieson. 1927-8. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 62. 123-32. 125-6 fig. 2, 3.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: RCAHMS. 1928. The RCAHMCS 9th Report & Inventory: Outer Hebrides, Skye and the Small Isles. 46, no. 158.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: J Sands. 1876-8. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 12. 186-92. 186-7 illust, 187.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: B Somerville. 1912b. J Roy Anthrop Inst. 42. 23-52. 50-2.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: G P and M Stell and Harman. 1988. Buildings of St Kilda. 48-9, no. 23.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: PSAS. 1876-8. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 12. 11-12,58-63,88-91,118-21,. 185.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: PSAS. 1911-12. Proc Soc Antiq Scot. 46. 10-14, 90-3, 177-82, 242-. 373.
  • --- Bibliographic reference: D C Heggie. 1981. Megalithic Science: ancient mathematics and astronomy in north-west Europe. 122.

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Record last edited

Mar 28 2008 1:34PM

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