Sunday, 14 May 2023

THE ‘CASTLE’ BROCH


Typical broch entry.

Given that brochs, referred to as ‘towers of the north’ by Ian Armit, and as castles by others,# are frequently written about as being defensive structures, a ‘fort,’* one could look at castle details in order to see if any might have been a part of the typical broch form. This strategy for review is suggested by Louis Sullivan’s dictum, Form Follows Function: the idea is that similar functions could involve similar forms; and vice versa. So it is that circular structures in history have been looked at to see if there might be some clues that could be gleaned for consideration as broch functions; see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2022/09/the-chinese-broch-hakka-tulou.html; and

https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2019/04/the-desert-broch-ksar-de-draa.html.



Mousa Broch, Shetland.


Here, the proposition is that the defensive castle forms might have been incorporated as forms for broch defences. Just how the brochs were completed at the top of the ‘tower’ structure is not known; many have made guesses, but no one really knows. This matter has been the subject of previous writings; see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2022/09/brochs-thinking-scribbles.html;

https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2023/03/the-broch-symbol-place.html; and

https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2023/03/the-broch-its-intramural-stair.html.



It does appear likely that something must have occurred at the upper portions of these structures that facilitated defence given the notion that these ‘towers’ had a deterrent role, being something like a fortification as a castle is; so one might ask if any defensive castle form might have been incorporated as a part of a broch. The earlier texts in voussoirs suggest that they might have been. This article offers 30 Ingenious Features Found Inside the World’s Most Epic Medieval Castles: might any have been used in the brochs?

See: https://cleverclassic.com/trending/epic-medieval-castles-fb/?psl=i_5d3db0&network_code=CM&ppc=1


CASTLE DETAILS




Mousa broch intramural stair - typically clockwise like the castle stair.^





Might brochs have had defensive openings?




Dun Carloway broch stair.







Iron-age structure.


Dun Carloway broch.






Typical broch plan.

Harlech castle plan.






Dun Carloway broch - a hilltop position.









Broch of Borwick, Orkney.


Scatness village and broch, Shetland.



Did brochs have wells?



There are characteristics in castles that have obvious parallels in brochs - or perhaps it is the other way around; the question is: are there some other aspects of castles that need to be considered and explored to help us better understand brochs?



We have to be much more rigorous with broch theories. There is no use discussing the idea that brochs were located within view of each other for communication without explaining how the occupants managed to get a position for good observation, or how they successfully communicated with other distant broch villagers. Likewise, it makes no sense to have ideas about a roof when the intramural stair is ignored  -see: https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2023/03/the-broch-its-intramural-stair.html; nor does it help when engineering and construction practicalities are ignored. Brochs were built by mankind - men and maybe women too; we need to understand that they did not materialise by mysticism or magic. Each stone was raised and placed by persons, people with physical limitations much like we have: feet, legs, arms, hands with certain capabilities, managed by a head that can decide ways of doing things, actions with processes that manage the same forces of gravity we experience, in the same time-frame of light and dark, in much the same weather conditions. By ignoring realities, we only create broch fantasies. So it is that, if we are going to say that brochs are defensive structures, we need to consider the defences beyond simple blind size and mass, along with all the other theories that have been conjured up.



It is really just being too lazy to propose ideas based on the experience of the world’s most complete broch at Mousa in Shetland. Climbing the stair and standing on the top of the broch is both astonishing, because of its age, and exhilarating, as one stands high scanning the arc of marvellous landscape before one’s eyes. It is truly an unforgettable involvement with an ancient place, but it has to be forgotten and carefully considered with what we know of those who built this wonder. There is no point in drawing on our perceptions and hopes, and turning these into ancient possibilities so potentially powerful in their conception that they distract us from the awareness of other necessities. Broch studies seem to be littered with theories that are singularly exclusive. While brochs may or may not be ‘holy’ as we think of it, they do need to be considered as integral wholes created by and used by living, thinking, feeling beings in a universe that we share too.



Our science might have made us more rationally logical over time, less ‘superstitious,’ but our broch thinking periodically seems overly illogical and somewhat superstitious. We need to be better than this if we truly want to understand these structures. One senses that a knowing consensus might bring an end to many researchers’ efforts, so the muddle of ‘creatively thoughtful’ challenges continues, even when other realities highlight their futility. It is a situation that is just as futile as standing on the top of Mousa, admiring the view while thinking that one might be ‘a man of ancient times.’ This is truly a fool's paradise. To stand on the top of Mousa broch and consider the experience as personal entertainment, another 'WOW!' to boast about on social media, is just as problematical, as it uses meaning and wonder for a silly, frivolous, selfish game.


#

The Castles of Scotland site notes:

Standing on a rocky outcrop and commanding panoramic views over Lismore and the Firth of Lorn, Tirefour Castle or Broch is an impressive and well-preserved Iron Age broch. The wall rises to over 10 foot for most of its length, and in one place survives to a height of 16 foot.

https://www.thecastlesofscotland.co.uk/the-best-castles/feature-articles/tirefour/

and

Bow Castle is the remains of an iron-age broch near the Gala Water, in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, in the parish of Stow. It is a scheduled monument.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bow_Castle_Broch


*

Brochs are roundhouse buildings found throughout Atlantic Scotland. The word broch is derived from the Lowland Scots 'brough', meaning fort. In the mid-19th century, Scottish antiquaries called brochs 'burgs', after Old Norse borg, with the same meaning. Brochs are often referred to as duns in the west.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broch


^

The text accompanying the castle stair explains:

Clockwise Spiral Staircases

You might not think of a spiral staircase as an ingenious feature from a medieval castle, but you’d be wrong. Whilst we’re used to seeing spiral staircases in contemporary homes and buildings, back in the Middle Ages, they had a pretty specific purpose.

Inside medieval castles, spiral staircases were always clockwise. This meant that any right-handed medieval knight trying to fight on a staircase would be impeded by the stone wall. It may sound minimal, but anything helps when it comes to battle!

Might the broch stair be seen in the same manner? If so, it would suggest that the upper space of the broch was a place to defend; perhaps it was the place for the village occupants to retreat to as well as being for ‘chapel’ purposes?  

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