The Herald

Iron Age fort’s secrets revealed

- JODY HARRISON

ARCHAEOLOG­ISTS are probing an ancient mystery uncovered by workers deep in a Highland forest.

The crumbling ruins are believed to have been an Iron Age fort, or possibly the home of a local chief or lord, and date back to about 2,400 years ago.

The site was known about from a survey taken in the 1940s, but had been forgotten about until it was spotted by loggers clearing the land.

Now researcher­s are unravellin­g its tantalisin­g mystery, with evidence showing the structure may have a violent past and was burnt down twice and rebuilt before finally being abandoned.

However, a lack of artefacts uncovered during the investigat­ion raises the intriguing possibilit­y that the site may have only been used by prehistori­c Scots living nearby as a refuge during times of war or strife.

The ruins were uncovered on forestry land on a hill known as Comar Wood in Strathglas­s, near Inverness, and excavated by a team of archaeolog­ists from AOC Archaeolog­y for two weeks.

Once cleared of trees, the remains of a large roundhouse known as a broch or dun-house were revealed, along with four other structures and a large defensive wall.

It is estimated that the structure was in use for 600 years at a time when Scotland was a tribal society with communitie­s scattered on their own fiefs or parcels of land.

The dun-house stands above a fertile valley and it has been suggested it began life as the home of a local chieftain, but was soon taken over by the people who lived nearby and adapted for use as a defensive structure.

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 ?? Picture: AOC Archaeolog­y ?? The crumbling remains of the Iron Age fort in Comar Wood, Strathglas­s, are uncovered by the team of experts.
Picture: AOC Archaeolog­y The crumbling remains of the Iron Age fort in Comar Wood, Strathglas­s, are uncovered by the team of experts.
 ??  ?? A broken rotary quern that formed part of the hearth slabs.
A broken rotary quern that formed part of the hearth slabs.
 ??  ?? Archaeolog­ists at the site which dates back about 2,400 years.
Archaeolog­ists at the site which dates back about 2,400 years.
 ??  ?? An artists’ impression of Iron Age people at work in a furnace.
An artists’ impression of Iron Age people at work in a furnace.

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