Whilst it is certainly possible to trace the tradition of building roundhouses back to the earlier Bronze Age, it is not until the later prehistoric period, that is the Iron Age, that roundhouses acquire iconic status (Harding 2023). South East Scotland has a range of Iron Age houses. The overwhelming majority of the houses are timber, but in rare examples, also of stone.
In This Section:
Regional
- Clyde Valley Archaeological Research Framework (CVARF)
- South East Scotland Archaeological Research Framework (SESARF)
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Landscape and Environment
- 3. Palaeolithic and Mesolithic
- 4. Neolithic
- 5. Chalcolithic and Bronze Age
- 7. Roman
- 6. Iron Age
- 6.1 Introduction
- 6.2 Settlement and Daily Life
- 6.3 Burial and Ritual
- 6.4 Material Culture, Craft and Trade
- 6.5 Conflict
- 6.6 Research Questions and Agenda
- 6.7 Bibliography
- 8. Early Medieval
- 9. Medieval
- 10. Post-Medieval
- 11. Modern
- SESARF Case Studies
- Highland Archaeological Research Framework
- Perth and Kinross Archaeological Research Framework
- Regional Archaeological Research Framework for Argyll
- South West Scotland Archaeological Research Framework (SWSARF)
- Scotland's Islands Research Framework for Archaeology
