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Maes Howe, chambered cairn

A Scheduled Monument in West Mainland, Orkney Islands

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Coordinates

Latitude: 58.9966 / 58°59'47"N

Longitude: -3.1882 / 3°11'17"W

OS Eastings: 331829

OS Northings: 1012772

OS Grid: HY318127

Mapcode National: GBR L4HY.N7Y

Mapcode Global: WH69X.043G

Entry Name: Maes Howe, chambered cairn

Scheduled Date: 18 August 1882

Last Amended: 10 March 1998

Source: Historic Environment Scotland

Source ID: SM90209

Schedule Class: Cultural

Category: Prehistoric ritual and funerary: chambered cairn

Location: Stenness

County: Orkney Islands

Electoral Ward: West Mainland

Traditional County: Orkney

Description

The monument is a chambered cairn on a large platform, and a large surrounding flat-bottomed ditch, an outer turf bank and associated and earlier remains, all known collectively as Maes Howe.

The monument includes the chambered tomb and the large platform and ditch, the turf bank and the remains of other features including stone-sockets. It also includes other remains associated with this and other phases of use of the area for ritual and ceremonial purposes.

The area to be scheduled is approximately elliptical on plan. It measures 130m NW-SE or thereabouts, and 120m NE-SW or thereabouts. It comprises the area in the care of the Secretary of State for Scotland and a band of ground 10m across outside the outermost edges of the area in state care. It excludes all existing modern fences.

Source: Historic Environment Scotland

Statement of Scheduling

The monument is of national importance, indeed international importance, as part of the core of a mainly third and second millennium BC (although including elements which may be of late 4th millennium BC date) ritual landscape. The architecturally exceptionally fine chambered tomb with its platform and ditch is important both as a field monument and because excavation has shown that it contains important information about the religious, ceremonial and funerary practices of late fourth, third and second millennium societies.

The monument is also important because other monuments within a broader area extending to the western horizons seem to have been sited in relationship to it. The monument is of additional importance because the chamber contains (together with other carvings) the finest collection of stone-carved Norse runes in the world.

Source: Historic Environment Scotland

Sources

Bibliography

RCAHMS records the monument as HY 31 SW 1.

References:

Davidson, J L and Henshall, A S, 1989, The chambered cairns of Orkney: an inventory of the structures and their contents, Edinburgh, 142-6, no. 36.

Renfrew, A C, 1978, Investigations in Orkney, Society of Antiquaries of London, Research Report No. 38, London, 23-6, 31-8.
Historic Environment Scotland Properties
Maes Howe Chambered Cairn
https://www.historicenvironment.scot/visit-a-place/places/maeshowe-chambered-cairn
Find out more

Source: Historic Environment Scotland

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