East Lomond Hill: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
<references /> | <references /> | ||
==Gallery== | |||
[Click on a picture below to see the image full-size] | |||
<gallery mode=packed> | |||
File:Wellbrae House.JPG|The house | |||
File:Wellbrae lintel.JPG|Dated lintel | |||
</gallery> | |||
[[Category:Scheduled monuments]] | [[Category:Scheduled monuments]] | ||
[[Category:Natural features]] | [[Category:Natural features]] | ||
[[Category:Outlying areas]] | [[Category:Outlying areas]] |
Revision as of 11:09, 2 February 2021
Building summary | |
---|---|
Name | East Lomond Hill |
Date | Iron Age |
OS grid ref | NO 24410 6186 |
Latitude & longitude | |
Listing | Scheduled Monument |
Listing reference | SM810 |
Listing date | 15/06/1936, updated 16/01/2014 |
The East Lomond Hill, also known as Falkland Hill (height 448 metres) dominates the town of Falkland from the south. It contains a scheduled monument East Lomond Hill, fort and cairn (HES reference SM810).
HES listing details[1] |
---|
Address/Site Name
East Lomond Hill, fort and cairn |
Type
Crosses and carved stones: symbol stone, Prehistoric domestic and defensive: fort (includes hill fort and promontory fort), Prehistoric ritual and funerary: cairn (type uncertain); cupmarks or cup-and-ring marks and similar rock art |
Description
The monument is the remains of a prehistoric fort and burial cairn on the summit of East Lomond Hill. The hill fort is likely to have been in use in the Iron Age (sometime between 500 BC and AD 600), while the burial cairn is earlier and dates probably from the Bronze Age. The remains of the cairn are visible on the summit as a low, circular turf-covered concentration of stones, measuring around 13m across. [...] |
Statement of National Importance
The monument is of national importance as the upstanding remains of a multi-period site, which includes a prehistoric burial cairn and an Iron Age hill fort with complex defences, which is probably of more than one phase in itself. [...] |
Further references
"A multivallate Iron Age hillfort, the highest in Fife (424m. O.D.) on a commanding site, measuring 60m. by 30m, within as many as four walls or ramparts. [...]"[2]
Notes
- ↑ HES record for SM810
- ↑ Gifford, Fife, page 203.
Gallery
[Click on a picture below to see the image full-size]
-
The house
-
Dated lintel