ABSTRACT

"Excavations and surveys adjacent to Hirsel House, Coldstream, have revealed a remarkably detailed history of a proprietory church and its cemetery for a period when the parochial structure in Scotland was in course of development, and when very little is known about the fate of estate churches after they were donated to support the newly founded monasteries of the 12th century. The church is set in a landscape with evidence for settlement from the Neolithic to the establishment of Hirsel House, the seat of the Earl of Home. Here, in an estate the boundaries of which has changed very little since the Middle Ages, a small unicellular drystone structure developed into a well-built Romanesque church with a rare example of its bell founding structure intact. The subsequent history when the church was burnt, robbed of stone and used for domestic purposes, then finally destroyed and covered over in the late Middle Ages is graphically illustrated by the wealth of artefacts from the site. There are traces of other medieval buildings to the north of the site and the cemetery-one of the largest rural cemeteries in Scotland- provides an interesting range of burial modes, as well as, together with the environmental evidence from the site, an insight into the community which the church and cemetery served."

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction to the site

chapter 2|18 pages

The estate

chapter 3|10 pages

The site surveys

chapter 7|12 pages

The perimeter

chapter 9|6 pages

Dating evidence

chapter 10|26 pages

Environmental evidence

chapter 11|22 pages

Human skeletal remains

chapter 12|22 pages

Structural materials

chapter 14|2 pages

Coins (by Marion M Archibald)

chapter 15|8 pages

Prehistoric pottery

chapter 16|2 pages

The Roman pottery

chapter 18|2 pages

Clay tobacco pipes (by Lloyd J Edwards)

chapter 20|24 pages

Iron

chapter 22|2 pages

Pierced scallop shells (by Rosemary Cramp)

chapter 23|4 pages

Lithic material

chapter 24|14 pages

Stone artefacts

chapter 25|2 pages

Glass objects

chapter 26|4 pages

Examination and analysis of the bell mould