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Latitude: 60.4133 / 60°24'47"N
Longitude: -1.4015 / 1°24'5"W
OS Eastings: 433067
OS Northings: 1170085
OS Grid: HU330700
Mapcode National: GBR Q1W6.Y94
Mapcode Global: XHD1Y.4JTC
Entry Name: Mangaster Voe, prehistoric house 630m NW of Innbanks
Scheduled Date: 20 December 1974
Last Amended: 5 July 2012
Source: Historic Environment Scotland
Source ID: SM3572
Schedule Class: Cultural
Category: Prehistoric domestic and defensive: house
Location: Northmaven
County: Shetland Islands
Electoral Ward: Shetland North
Traditional County: Shetland
The monument comprises the remains of a prehistoric house. The remains consist of a roughly circular mound with a pronounced hollow in the centre. The house is approximately 12m N-S by 8.5m transversely, and consists of low footings of turf and stone. Small sections of stone facing are visible on the northern edge of the mound. The house is believed to be late Neolithic or Bronze Age in date, around 3000 to 1000 BC. It is located 30m from the shore at around 10m above sea level and lies on semi-improved grassland overlooking Mangaster Voe to the north. The monument was originally scheduled in 1974 but the area was inadequate and the documentation does not meet modern standards: the present rescheduling rectifies this.
The area to be scheduled is circular on plan, 30m in diameter, to include the remains described above and an area around them within which evidence relating to the monument's construction, use and abandonment may survive, as shown in red on the accompanying map.
Source: Historic Environment Scotland
Cultural Significance
The monument's cultural significance can be expressed as follows:
Intrinsic characteristics
The prehistoric house survives in good condition. The overall form of the house is visible and sections of stone wall-facing protrude through the turf in places. The site is likely to contain important buried deposits, including artefacts, ecofacts and other environmental evidence.
Examination of the building foundations can give us detailed information about the form and construction of prehistoric houses, while buried features within the building interior can contribute to our understanding of how houses were used and how this might change over time. Buried artefacts and ecofacts and buried soils can contribute to our understanding of how people lived and worked, and improve our understanding of prehistoric trade and exchange and the nature of the agricultural economy. Archaeological investigation at similar sites has yielded high quality artefactual and environmental material, which can help us to build up a much fuller picture of prehistoric domestic life.
Contextual characteristics
This is one of a number of broadly similar prehistoric houses that characterise early settlement and the development of agriculture in the third to second millennium BC in Shetland. It is part of a relatively rare and geographically restricted group, which gives a more balanced view of prehistoric life when compared with the more common and widespread burial and ceremonial monuments of the later Neolithic elsewhere in Scotland.
The house lies in close proximity to other broadly contemporary monuments: another prehistoric house lies 50m to the northeast, and a group of four prehistoric houses is situated 360m to the southeast. This monument is an important element of a much wider relict landscape and it testifies to early human efforts to exploit the land and natural resources close to the shoreline at Mangaster Voe for agricultural production. There can be an impressive time-depth to these early houses, as may well be the case here, which can tell us much about change and continuity over long periods. Comparison of this site with the other prehistoric domestic remains in the area would help us to develop a much better understanding of prehistoric domestic life and landuse.
National Importance
This monument is of national importance because it has an inherent potential to make a significant addition to the understanding of the past, in particular, the nature of prehistoric settlement, agriculture and landuse in Shetland. It has the potential to improve our understanding of the distribution of settlement, the structural techniques used to build houses and changes in the nature of settlement over time. There is also excellent potential to study how the site fitted into a landscape that is rich in prehistoric remains. The loss of this monument would impede our ability to understand the nature of prehistoric domestic architecture and settlement, both in Shetland and Scotland.
Source: Historic Environment Scotland
Bibliography
RCAHMS records the site as HU37SW 3.
References
Calder, C S T, 1958 'Stone Age house-sites in Shetland', Proc Soc Antiq Scot, vol 89, 363.
Calder, C S T, 1965 'Cairns, Neolithic Houses and Burnt Mounds in Shetland', Proc Soc Antiq Scot, vol 96, 45-7.
Source: Historic Environment Scotland
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