Scheduled Monument

The Bracken, enclosed settlement and droveway 370m WSW ofSM11994

Status: Designated

Documents

Where documents include maps, the use of this data is subject to terms and conditions (https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/termsandconditions).

The legal document available for download below constitutes the formal designation of the monument under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979. The additional details provided on this page are provided for information purposes only and do not form part of the designation. Historic Environment Scotland accepts no liability for any loss or damages arising from reliance on any inaccuracies within this additional information.

Summary

Date Added
19/12/2007
Type
Prehistoric domestic and defensive: droveway; enclosure (domestic or defensive, rather than ritual or funerary); settlement (if not assigned to any more specific type)
Local Authority
Dumfries And Galloway
Parish
Gretna
NGR
NY 30296 68888
Coordinates
330296, 568888

Description

The monument comprises an enclosed settlement and ditched droveway of probable Iron-Age date. It lies in an area of improved pasture to the NW of Gretna Services Area, just below the summit of a low ridge on a gentle SW-facing slope.

The enclosed settlement is oval on plan and known as Warden's Dyke. Its interior measures about 55m NE-SW by about 42m transversely, enclosed by two substantial earth-and-stone banks separated by a wide ditch. The inner bank is best preserved on the north-east, south-east and south-west, where it is about 3m wide and stands about 0.5m above the interior of the enclosure and about 1.5m above the base of the ditch. The outer bank is more substantial, measuring about 3m wide by up to 2m high, and has been enlarged by the creation of a woodland plantation bank along its summit. The ditch that separates the bank varies in width from about 5m up to about 10m. A second, shallow ditch, which may have provided material for the plantation bank, runs around the exterior of the outer bank. The banks and ditches measure up to about 15m in overall width, giving the settlement overall dimensions of about 85m NE-SW by 70m transversely. There are two entrances to the enclosure; one in the east-south-east and one in the west-north-west.

Two parallel cropmarks, visible in oblique aerial photographs, extend from the WNW entrance of the enclosure and run west-north-west for a distance of about 70m. These cropmarks indicate the positions of buried ditches that probably define the course of a ditched droveway or trackway. Archaeological excavation in 1992 of similar ditch features immediately to the east of the enclosure was not able to confirm their date, although it is likely that the droveway was contemporary with the settlement. The excavations also revealed a large number of pits, postholes and other archaeological features dating to the neolithic period and Bronze Age, demonstrating that the site had been a focus for human settlement long before the construction of the Iron-Age enclosure. Further neolithic and Bronze-age deposits are likely to survive within and around the enclosure.

The area to be scheduled is irregular on plan, to include the remains described and an area around within which evidence relating to their construction and use may survive, as shown in red on the accompanying map. The scheduled area is bounded on the north-east by a post-and-rail fence, which is excluded from the scheduling.

Statement of National Importance

Cultural Significance

The monument's cultural significance can be expressed as follows:

Intrinsic characteristics

The enclosure is a well-preserved example of a bi-vallate settlement, likely to date to the late first millennium BC or early first millennium AD, surviving in an area of high agricultural activity. Buried deposits inside the enclosure may preserve evidence relating to the social structure and domestic architecture of the Iron-Age people who built and used this monument. Potential exists for a buried soil to be preserved beneath the banks of the enclosure, while the ditches are likely to contain evidence than can inform us about the environment within which the enclosure and droveway were constructed and used. The relationship between the ditched droveway and the entrance into the enclosure may provide evidence to further our understanding of the physical pattern of local settlement and animal husbandry in the Iron Age. The monument is also likely to contain evidence relating to neolithic and Bronze-Age activity at this location.

Contextual characteristics

The monument is one of a number of Iron-Age defended settlement sites with associated droveways or field systems in eastern Dumfries and Galloway, although the presence of neolithic and Bronze-Age remains suggests that this location was a significant site long before the enclosure was built. It occupies a prominent position within the landscape, with wide views over the surrounding area, particularly to the W and S. Comparing and contrasting the enclosure to other nearby examples can enable an understanding of how Iron-Age farmers positioned such sites within the landscape, as well as provide enhanced contexts to improve our understanding of the Iron-Age economy and structure of society. Later prehistoric droveways are rare in Scotland but there is a concentration of them in eastern Dumfries and Galloway. In eastern Dumfries and Galloway such enclosures may also provide evidence of native-Roman interaction. We can use information gained from the preservation and study of this site to gain an insight into wider neolithic, Bronze-Age and Iron-Age settlement across Scotland.

National Importance

The monument is of national importance because it has an inherent potential to further our understanding of a settlement type that characterises part of the wider Iron-Age domestic landscape, forming an intrinsic element of the later prehistoric settlement pattern along the Solway Firth. Archaeological deposits preserved within the banks, ditches and interior of the monument may provide information about the people who built and occupied the site, what the contemporary environment looked like, and how it was being managed. Spatial analysis of this monument and others in the wider area may further our understanding of patterns of landholding during the Iron Age. The monument also has an inherent potential to further our understanding of neolithic and Bronze-Age settlement and economy. Its loss would impede our future ability to appreciate and understand the prehistoric landscape and its inhabitants.

References

Bibliography

RCAHMS record the site as NY36NW 18.

Aerial photographs and transcriptions:

Jones, B 1977-9 DF 2546 PO.

RCAHMS 1991 MS 840/504.

References:

Banks I 1992, WARDEN?S DYKE, Glasgow University Archaeological Research Division.

Banks I 2004, ?The excavation of multi-period remains adjacent to the banked enclosure of Warden's Dyke: Neolithic, Bronze Age and early historic evidence from the M74?, TRANS DUMFRIESSHIRE GALLOWAY NATUR HIST ANTIQ SOC 78, 37, 60.

Mercer R 1997, ?Kirkpatrick Fleming Dumfriesshire. An Anatomy of a Parish in South West Scotland?, DUMFRIESSHIRE GALLOWAY NATUR HIST ANTIQ SOC, 15-16, 36, 42-43, Arch 69.

OSA 1791-9, THE STATISTICAL ACCOUNT OF SCOTLAND, DRAWN UP FROM THE COMMUNICATIONS OF THE MINISTERS OF THE DIFFERENT PARISHES, Sinclair, J (Sir), Edinburgh, vol. 13, 272.

RCAHMS 1997, EASTERN DUMFRIESSHIRE: AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL LANDSCAPE, Edinburgh: HMSO, 55, 299, 308, No. 687 and 1184.

About Scheduled Monuments

Historic Environment Scotland is responsible for designating sites and places at the national level. These designations are Scheduled monuments, Listed buildings, Inventory of gardens and designed landscapes and Inventory of historic battlefields.

We make recommendations to the Scottish Government about historic marine protected areas, and the Scottish Ministers decide whether to designate.

Scheduling is the process that identifies, designates and provides statutory protection for monuments and archaeological sites of national importance as set out in the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979.

We schedule sites and monuments that are found to be of national importance using the selection guidance published in Designation Policy and Selection Guidance (2019)

Scheduled monument records provide an indication of the national importance of the scheduled monument which has been identified by the description and map. The description and map (see ‘legal documents’ above) showing the scheduled area is the designation of the monument under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979. The statement of national importance and additional information provided are supplementary and provided for general information purposes only. Historic Environment Scotland accepts no liability for any loss or damages arising from reliance on any inaccuracies within the statement of national importance or additional information. These records are not definitive historical or archaeological accounts or a complete description of the monument(s).

The format of scheduled monument records has changed over time. Earlier records will usually be brief. Some information will not have been recorded and the map will not be to current standards. Even if what is described and what is mapped has changed, the monument is still scheduled.

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Printed: 25/07/2025 03:40