Edin's Hall Broch

Edin's Hall Broch, also known as Odin's Hall Broch is a 2nd century broch near Duns in the Borders of Scotland. It is one of very few brochs found in southern Scotland. It is roughly 27m in diameter.

The Broch has apparently changed its name, as it was known as Wooden's (read Odin or Woden the Norse God) Hall in the 18th Century. This suggests that its association with Red Etin's (Edin) Hall is a later idea. Red Etin, according to Folklore Myths and Legends of Britain (Readers Digest), was a three headed giant who kidnapped the King of Scotland’s daughter and held her captive in his Hall. Two widows had 3 sons who quested to save the her from captivity. The first two sons were turned to stone - unable to answer the giants riddles - the third son answered the riddles and cut off the giants three heads with one blow of his axe; releasing the other sons and the King’s daughter from bondage. This is one of the most southerly broch survivals, which are more typically associated with Northern Scotland. Broch’s were multi floored defensive structures with room for cattle in the lower enclosure and accommodation on the upper floors accessed by passageways in the thick walls.

The broch’s location is a developed site with evidence of occupation covering the Iron Age and Roman occupation. The broch is situated in the NW corner of an earlier fort (probably the earliest feature of the site) 73M by 134M consisting of a double ring of defensive ditches and ramparts, overlooking a steep slope above the valley cut by Whiteadder water.

The fort is thought to date from around the time of the earliest Roman invasion of Britain although this area was not directly effected until much later. The date of the broch is much more of a mystery but it has been speculated that it was built between the two main periods of Roman occupation in Scotland: some time in the 2nd Century AD. Only the lower level of the broch survives, the walls of which are some 5M thick, with an entrance passage to the circular courtyard protected by two opposing guard chambers. The broch is some 27M in diameter and there is enough intact to give an idea of its grandeur when it was complete. Access to the walls and upper floors would have been via an opening in the wall of the interior leading to a stair and passage.

There are traces of a rectangular enclosure around the broch enclosing roundhouse foundations, the central of which would have been a huge structure in its own right. There are copper mines nearby - perhaps a reason for the settlement in the area, and there is another hill fort close to the site on Cockburn Law.


Famous quotes containing the words hall and/or broch:

    Having children can smooth the relationship, too. Mother and daughter are now equals. That is hard to imagine, even harder to accept, for among other things, it means realizing that your own mother felt this way, too—unsure of herself, weak in the knees, terrified about what in the world to do with you. It means accepting that she was tired, inept, sometimes stupid; that she, too, sat in the dark at 2:00 A.M. with a child shrieking across the hall and no clue to the child’s trouble.
    Anna Quindlen (20th century)

    Those who live by the sea can hardly form a single thought of which the sea would not be part.
    —Hermann Broch (1886–1951)