By Bernie Bell.

We’ve walked at Bu Sands, Burray

and passed by the Kirk but hadn’t realised how much of interest there is to be found there until I Googled, and read this

https://www.themodernantiquarian.com/…/southtown-burray…

The idea of it originally being the site of a broch interested me, and reminds me of St. Michael’s in Harray

https://theorkneynews.scot/…/the-fest-may-be-over-but…

And of the Broch near/under what is now Warebeth Cemetery…

http://www.spanglefish.com/berniesblog/blog.asp?blogid=16031

So we went to have a look and see/feel for ourselves what we made of the site.

We parked in the car park and walked to the right along the Kirkyard wall, where a steep rise in the land beneath the ruin of the Kirk became apparent..

Then back the way we came, through the main gate into the Kirkyard

the gate to the kirkyard with a Commonwealth War Graves Commission notice on it

and straight ahead to the War Memorial, noticing how young the people named there were when they died – mostly in their 20’s and 30’s..

the war memorial with two wreaths of poppies at its base

From this point, looking to our right and over the wall, again,  the rise in the land is clear

a view along the wall past the war memorial to the kirk on the raised ground

There is a stone wall as the land rises by the Kirk, and we wondered is this the remains of an earlier Kirk, or of the Broch?

a low wall at the front and above it the remains of the kirk even higher up

The Kirk is ruinous, but is still a fine building, with a window through which we could see an archway in an internal wall

through the window area towards the rest of the kirk

We then walked round to the front of the Kirk, noticing again that there is definitely a large, raised area which the Kirk stands on

the grass slope of the kirkyard

Through the doorway

the remains of a doorway

….to the interior, which has a wonderfully peaceful feel to it.

There is an information board

information board

Which states that….

Recent research by Dr. S.J. Gibbon of UHI has identified this Kirk as one of over 200 churches in Orkney dating from the 10th to 13th Centuries……

……the stone used for constructing the walls could have come from the surrounding ancient structure which may have been a broch.”

The information board also has an image of a Norse era decorated bone handle which was found in the vicinity of the Kirk and is now in the Orkney Museum, Kirkwall

illustration of a Viking artefact

A modern cross has been placed at the end of the kirk…

cross up against the remains of the stone wall

Over the years, folk have carved their initials and heart-shapes into the plaster on the walls.  Somehow, this didn’t feel wrong – just human

marks made into the wall

There are also patterns in the plaster…

remains of plaster on the stone wall

Looking out through the windows, we could see the obelisks and headstones of the Kirkyard, as folk would have been able to when the Kirk was in use and the sermon was long!

view through an opening to the gravestones

Back out through the door, and we walked to our left to the far corner of the Kirk

the remains of the kirk with gravestones around it

….where, looking over the wall we could see how it would have been a good position for a Broch – overlooking the entrance to the Bay…

view across the bay

From this corner of the Kirkyard, the steep slope of the land away from the Kirk was again in evidence

view down the slope in the kirkyard with gravestones

We’re not archaeologists or historians – just people who are interested in times past and lives lived.  We both feel that there is a reasonable likelihood that the kirk stands on a Broch.  It’s a site of great interest….and peace.

Then…to Polly Kettle for lunch…

http://www.spanglefish.com/berniesblog/blog.asp?blogid=16972

….which was ab-so-lutely gorgeous!


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2 responses to “Another Kirk On A Broch?”

  1. berniebell1955 Avatar
    berniebell1955

    The link for St. Michael’s, Harray doesn’t appear to work either – this should…. https://theorkneynews.scot/2021/11/03/the-fest-may-be-over-but-heres-more-about-brochs/

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