Dun Telve

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Dun Telve
File:Dun Telve - geograph.org.uk - 188336.jpg
Dun Telve
Dun Telve is located in Highland
Dun Telve
Shown within Highland
Alternate name Dùn Teilbh
Location Scottish Highlands
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Type Broch
History
Periods Iron Age
Site notes
Ownership Historic Scotland
Public access Yes

Dun Telve (Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Teilbh) is an iron-age broch located about 4 kilometres southeast of the village of Glenelg, Highland, in Scotland. It is one of the best preserved brochs in Scotland.

Location

Dun Telve (grid reference NG82921726) stands on the north bank of the Abhainn a’Ghlaine Bhig, in the lower reaches of Gleann Beag. It lies next to the minor road which leads south from Glenelg. The neighbouring broch of Dun Troddan lies 470 metres to the east, and the "semi-broch" known as Dun Grugaig is around 2.5 kilometres further east.[1]

History

It is thought that the broch was robbed for stone in 1722 (probably for the building of Bernera Barracks in Glenelg).[2] Dun Telve was popular with tourists by the late 18th century, and was first sketched in the late 18th century.[2] It was surveyed in detail by Henry Dryden (1871-3). The building was brought into state care between 1882 and 1901 and the boundary markers that define the area of guardianship are still visible.[2] Around 1914 a programme of works was undertaken by the Office of Works which included "clearing out" the interior, inserting concrete into the upper intra-mural space and pointing the internal wall-face.[2] The broch has never been archaeologically excavated.[2] The broch is now in the care of Historic Scotland.

Description

The broch consists of a drystone tower which measures 18.3 metres in diameter, and currently stands to a maximum height of 10.2 metres to the west and northwest.[2] The external walls are 4.3 metres thick at the base and 1.2 metres thick at the top.[2] The entrance is on the west but it has been modified, probably in the mid 19th century.[2] On the south side of the entrance passage is a small side-chamber, sometimes called a "guard cell".[3]

A doorway on the north side of the interior of the broch provides access first to an internal cell and then to the intra-mural space that narrows as it rises through to the top of the surviving wall.[2] Access up the tower is by a winding stone stair, and openings at intervals once gave access to the upper floors.[3] The presence of two horizontal stone ledges, or scarcements, up the height of the surviving section suggests that there were two upper floors.[3] The top floor would have been around 9 metres above ground level.[3]

Structures appended to the west and northwest sides of Dun Telve include at least one rectangular building.[2]

References

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External links