Copyright: Manx National Heritage

Manx National Heritage

1068.20



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Cronk ny Merriu


Description:  Medieval longhouse

When first surveyed by the Ordnance Survey in 1868, the most obvious features on the site were the large, grass-covered bank, standing 3.5m high and 5m wide, and the less substantial remains of a rectangular building behind it on the promontory.

The interior of the headland is now dominated by a later longhouse which is likely to have disturbed or destroyed most traces of earlier occupation. The longhouse measures 13.5m by 7.5m, with earthen walls 1.5m thick faced inside and out in stone. The walls originally stood to a height of around 1.5m, and probably supported a pitched roof. Two doorways are located opposite each other near the west end, and low stone benches run along both of the long walls and across the western gable. There was little evidence of domestic activity, only rather basic remains of a hearth, and no domestic rubbish. The form of the building thus conforms to a domestic Viking longhouse, while the excavated evidence suggests that it was not permanently occupied.

No dating evidence was found during the excavations but in 1970, a half-penny of Edward I, dating 1280-81, was found in the back-fill of the dig and presumably indicates some occupation of the site after the end of Norse rule on the Island in 1265.

Country:  Isle of Man

County:  Middle

Parish:  Santon

Named Location:  Port Grenaugh

Grid Reference:   SC317704

Map Reference:  [EPSG:27700] 231740, 470480

Period/Subject:  EARLY MEDIEVAL - LONGHOUSE

Identifiers: 
[ADS] Depositor Id: 1068.20
[ADS] Import RCN: MANX15-1068.20

People Involved: 
[Publisher] Manx National Heritage