Bronze Age cemetery. Sites of up to 15 Bronze Age burial mounds, the remains of which were surveyable when recorded by the Ordnance Survey in 1867. The group lying to the south of the Medieval chapel are numbered 0560.31 - 0560.39, and the group lying to the NE of the chapel 0560.41 - 0560.46
Medieval and post-Medieval watch station.
The hill for the Day Watch for the parish of Malew was at 'The Barrow', according to a document dated 1627 within the Castle Rushen Papers archive. Based on place name evidence and topographical observation, The Barrow would appear to be the hilltop now known as the Broogh. The hill is marked by a cropmark enclosure of possible Iron Age date.
The Day Watch was part of a system of 'watch and ward' instituted on a parish-by-parish basis throughout the Isle of Man, beginning putatively in the Viking Age and lasting until the 17th century.
Local militia were expected to keep watch from hilltops during daylight hours, and from vulnerable coastal locations - inlets, rivermouths and open beaches - at night.
One of the ports for the Night Watch in Malew was at 'Reynoldsway', i.e. Ronaldsway, which may in actuality refer to modern Derbyhaven or the mouth of the Santon Burn at Cass ny Hawin, where an apparently Iron Age promontory fort shows extensive signs of modification during the medieval period (PRN 0074). The site is only 600m east of the Broogh, and the two are intervisible.
Medieval farmstead. The three structures on the site confused early antiquaries, who suggested the circle and alignments of stones forming an avenue might be elements of a prehistoric temple. Excavations in the 1930s were inconclusive: the site had been disturbed by an overflowing spring, which may have carried away datable artefacts.
The two rectilinear structures appear to be massive examples - one is 20m long, the other 18m - of the rectangular houses built throughout the Viking world around 1,000 years ago, though both are longer and wider than any other structure of this period so far found on the Island.
The upper of the two is the larger, with bowed walls 20m long and 2.1m thick. The maximum internal width is 8.9m. The walls are of earth and stone and survive to 0.8m in height; massive boulders occur at intervals. No trace of gable walls survives above ground but excavation suggests these may have been constructed in timber and turf. The remains of three much smaller structures survive in the interior which are thought to represent the ruins of shepherds' huts or shielings, built after the larger building was abandoned and perhaps ruinous.
It seems likely that this farmstead, which is built on marginal farmland, proved not to be viable and was abandoned in favour of use during the medieval period as a seasonal settlement from which livestock was tended on nearby common land during the summer. If so, the site, uniquely for the Island, brings together buildings of Iron Age and Viking styles that were used together and survive down to the present.
Medieval farmstead. The three structures on the site confused early antiquaries, who suggested the circle and alignments of stones forming an avenue might be elements of a prehistoric temple. Excavations in the 1930s were inconclusive: the site had been disturbed by an overflowing spring, which may have carried away datable artefacts.
The two rectilinear structures appear to be massive examples - one is 20m long, the other 18m - of the rectangular houses built throughout the Viking world around 1,000 years ago, though both are longer and wider than any other structure of this period so far found on the Island.
The lower of the two is only slightly smaller, 18m long and 6m wide, with walls 1.8m thick and 0.7m high. The internal arrangement of stone slabs suggests that the structure may at one time have served as a stalled byre. Unlike its neighbour, its long walls are straight, and there survives evidence for opposed doorways towards the east end, now partially blocked. These appear too narrow for use by animals, and may imply that the stalls represent the building's conversion for use by animals.
It seems likely that this farmstead, which is built on marginal farmland, proved not to be viable and was abandoned in favour of use during the medieval period as a seasonal settlement from which livestock was tended on nearby common land during the summer. If so, the site, uniquely for the Island, brings together buildings of Iron Age and Viking styles that were used together and survive down to the present.
The remains of three much smaller structures survive in the interior of one of the longhouses, and are thought to represent the ruins of shepherds' huts or shielings, built after the larger building was abandoned and perhaps ruinous.
It seems likely that this farmstead, which is built on marginal farmland, proved not to be viable and was abandoned in favour of use during the medieval period as a seasonal settlement from which livestock was tended on nearby common land during the summer. If so, the site, uniquely for the Island, brings together buildings of Iron Age and Viking styles that were used together and survive down to the present.
Iron Age farmstead. The three structures on the site confused early antiquaries, who suggested the circle and alignments of stones forming an avenue might be elements of a prehistoric temple. Excavations in the 1930s were inconclusive: the site had been disturbed by an overflowing spring, which may have carried away datable artefacts.
The structure earlier identified as a stone circle consists of a circle of 29 standing stones, but between these there is walling in all but one case, forming a doorway. The internal diameter is 13.2m, and the walls average 1.6m in width. The doorway is 1.2m wide. Parts of the interior were paved, and while the excavators in the 1930s found no evidence for posts that might have supported a roof, the general consensus is that this was a large, stone-built roundhouse built during the late Iron Age perhaps 1,200 - 1,300 years ago.
It seems likely that this site, which is built on marginal farmland, proved not to be viable and was abandoned in favour of use during the medieval period as a seasonal settlement from which livestock was tended on nearby common land during the summer. If so, the site, uniquely for the Island, brings together buildings of Iron Age and Viking styles that were used together and survive down to the present.