Book Review: ‘The Brochs of Scotland’ by J. N. G. Ritchie. 

‘The Brochs of Scotland’ is a bit of an unusual book for me to review; the book is a type of publication that is known as a monograph, that is, a book or pamphlet on a single scholarly topic.  Monographs are usually small, ‘The Brochs of Scotland’ is only 56 pages total, and tend to be a bit technical. Because of their narrow focus of interest typically only a few thousand copies of a monograph are printed, often by a publishing house that specializes in such small, scholarly works. ‘The Brochs of Scotland’ is in fact printed by Shire Publishing, a division of Bloomsbury Publishing that is devoted to such books.

Cover of ‘The Brochs of Scotland’ by J. N. G. Ritchie. The book is available at Amazon. (Credit: Amazon.com)

In the history of science a few monographs have gone on to become famous, the best example would probably be Galileo’s ‘The Starry Messenger’. Most monographs however remain virtually unknown to everyone but a specialist in the field or a devoted amateur.

Cover page of Galileo’s ‘The Starry Messenger’ sometimes considered to be a founding document of modern science and certainly one of the most important publications in history! (Credit: Wikipedia)

As I was reading ‘The Brochs of Scotland’ I happened to notice that I have quite a few monographs, a few examples are ‘Stonehenge and Avebury’, ‘Seeing Stars’, and ‘A List of Devonian Fossils collected in Western New York with notes on their Stratigraphic Distribution’. I decided to review ‘The Brochs of Scotland’ not only because it would give me a opportunity to discuss these unusual Iron Age structures that are unique to Scotland but because it would also give me the chance to talk about monographs.

Mousa Broch is one of the best preserved Brochs giving a real impression of just how impressive the structures could be. (Credit: Wikipedia)

Brochs are a distinctive form of stone tower or fortress that were built by the hundreds between approximately the years 100 BCE and 100 CE. Brochs are unknown outside of modern Scotland and most are concentrated in the northern and western parts of the country, only a few Brochs can be found in the middle and southern parts of the country. The majority of Brochs are now ruins but a few are complete enough to show what impressive structures they were in their heyday.

Artist’s impression of what archaeologists think the interior of a Broch could have looked like. Obviously such large-scale structures required the efforts of many people to build and were probably the dwelling of the local chief or clan leader. (Credit: The Isle of Mull)

As I said Brochs are stone towers with a central open area round 10 meters in diameter where the inhabitants lived. This area was surrounded by a massive circular wall between 4 and 5 meters in thickness and as much as 10 meters in height. Those thick walls are perhaps the most striking feature of the Brochs because they are really a double wall with a space in between that averages around a meter wide inside them. Often the space between the walls was used as a room or storage area. At the same time stairways to the top of the Brochs were also built into the walls.

This image of the Dun Telve broch clearly shows the double wall construction technique. Storage areas and stairs to the upper floors were built into the walls of brochs. (Credit: MyHighlands.de)

Each Broch had only a single entrance from the outside to the central area, often with one of the rooms attached to the entrance, perhaps as a guard post? In any case the entrances were well protected, attachments for bolting heavy wooden doors can still be seen in the better preserved Brochs.

The area around a broch was also built up with houses and barns or other structures. The whole area was surrounded by a wall creating something of a small town, a well defended one! (Credit: Caithness Broch Project)

The whole design of the Brochs indicates that they were built for defense, the Iron Age equivalent of castles for local chiefs. However only a very few of the remaining Brochs show any sign of ever having been attacked, the author Ritchie suggested that they may have been built so well that it was a waste of time and effort to even consider attacking one.

The Castles of their day Brochs appear to have been so successful that archaeologists have found little evidence of any of them ever being attacked! (Credit: BBC)

If that was so then why did the 2nd century inhabitants of Scotland stop building them, why over the next few hundred years were the Brochs abandoned? In ‘The Brochs of Scotland’ the author considers both this question and the also unknown origins of the Broch style of architecture. The monograph also considers the questions of what it was like to live in Scotland at the time of the Brochs along with brief descriptions of some of the better known, better preserved Brochs along with some of the artifacts that have been found among them.

Some of the tools, jewelry and weapons made in Scotland during the age of the Brochs. There must have been something of an advanced civilization there at that time to have made both these artifacts and the Brochs as well! (Credit: Phys.org)

Now I don’t suppose that anyone out there is going to rush to buy a copy of  ‘The Brochs of Scotland’ unless you’re as interested in the archaeology of the British Isles as I am. It is actually available from Amazon if you are. Still, I do recommend ‘The Brochs of Scotland’; it is a wonderful overview of these ancient, formidable yet kinda weird habitations.

The people that the Greeks called Celts are still mostly a mystery. Although archaeologists have learned a great deal about them there is still a lot to be learned. (Credit: World History Encyclopedia)

And I also recommend monographs in general. They are wonderful little books, containing a great deal of information on very select subjects. So, if you have an interest in Hindu temples, or the birds of Chile, or the paintings of Rembrandt check to see if there are any available monographs on the subject. I’m sure someone has written one sometime or another!

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