Barra Hill
Perth, NO 262 504; 210 metres


Site of a pre-historic fort also where the Battle of Barra was fought in 1308
between King Robert The Bruce and Comyn of Buchan.
'The most prominent feature of this
site is the ruin of a very large and strong wall, originally timber-laced
and now partly vitrified, forming and enclosure of regular plan with parallel
sides and semicircular ends, area about 0.2 hectares. There is apparently
no entrance. Outside it are some additional enclosures which can be best understood
from the plan. These suggest that the vitrified fort has been built over the
remains of an earlier structure. Essentially, this seems to have been protected
mainly by natural crags on the north, and on the sides by a huge bank, mostly
built up with material from a large quarry ditch set some way behind
it, but also using a natural hump at the east end. The entrance was between
this and the top of the crags. At the west end the irregularity of the ground
combined with the superimposition of the stone fort makes it impossible to
work out the arrangements from surface investigation; there may have been
another entrance about here through the south bank. The asrticicial pool pool
is outside the defences, for the banks which enclose it are very slight.'
- AHA Hogg, Hill-forts of Britain

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Brigantes Nation 2002