To and From the Braes

This project, funded by the Scottish Graduate School for Arts and Humanities aims to explore the busyness of upland landscapes across the Highlands and Islands in the early modern period, through an investigation of the relationship between sheiling practice and other upland seasonal practices. This it is intended will contribute to our understandings of these landscapes and their past busyness – working to ‘repopulate’ these landscapes archaeologically and in the popular imagination, and challenging tired notions of romantic upland emptiness and wild sublimity.

A large shieling hut, later used as a Whisky still house, excavated as part of this project in 2022 © Scott McCreadie

Shieling practice was selected as a core focus of this research due to its important role in the use and management of these upland landscapes. This project has conducted walkover surveys in Glencoe, Mar Lodge Estate and the Isles of Canna and Sanday, and excavations of shieling huts and related features in Gleann Leac-na-Muidhe, Glencoe. The results of this fieldwork are reported in reports, a PSAS article and D&E 2021 & 2022 volume entries.

Research questions guiding this project included:

  • What was the relationship between shieling practice and other seasonal upland industries and practices in the highlands of Scotland?
  • How did the changing social and economic practices in the post-medieval period impact the development of shieling practice?
  • How can we ‘repopulate’ the post-medieval highlands in the minds of future generations.
Workshops in the Glencoe Folk Museum with local community members © Catriona Davidson

As part of this project workshops were carried out with members of the local community of Glencoe, hosted by the Glencoe Folk Museum, which aimed to explore the landscape and heritage values held by members of this community and to understand how they engaged with the landscape of Glencoe through work and leisure.

This research was conducted by Edward Stewart and supervised by Dr Michael Given, Dr Rachel Opitz and Prof Sian Jones.

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