Bow Castle Broch
Bow Castle Shown within Scottish Borders | |
| Location | Stow of Wedale |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 55°39′57″N 2°51′28″W / 55.665942°N 2.857845°W |
| Type | Broch |
| History | |
| Periods | Iron Age |
| Designated | 28 February 1924 |
| Reference no. | SM1162 |
Bow Castle is the remains of an iron-age broch near the Gala Water, in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, in the parish of Stow. It is a scheduled monument.[1]
Description
Bow Castle (grid reference NT46134171) stands on level ground on the edge of a steep slope southwest of the valley of the Gala Water.[2] The broch has a wall 4.1 metres thick, enclosing an area 9.7 metres in diameter.[2]
The broch is one of only three remaining in the Borders; the other two are Torwoodlee Broch, and Edin's Hall Broch.
Excavations
It was excavated in 1890 when pottery, including some 2nd-century Roman amphora fragments, were found.[2] In 1922 a 2nd-century Roman enamelled bronze brooch in the form of a cockerel was found among the ruins of the wall.[2]
Information concerning the dating and use of the broch is limited due to the lack of modern excavations.[2] However, Torwoodlee Broch, two miles to the north, was built and destroyed during the Roman occupations of southern Scotland and it is likely that Bow Castle shared a similar history.[2]
Conservation and heritage status
Bow Castle Broch is protected as a scheduled monument under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979, the main legislation used in the United Kingdom to safeguard nationally important archaeological sites. The monument was first scheduled on 28 February 1924 in recognition of its significance as one of the few surviving brochs in the Scottish Borders.[3]
The site is recorded and monitored by Historic Environment Scotland. The designation protects both the visible remains of the broch and the surrounding ground where buried archaeological deposits may survive.[2] Because of this status, any excavation, construction, or other disturbance requires official consent under heritage protection law.[4]
Today, the broch survives mainly as low turf covered stonework marking the circular wall of the tower.[2] The remains stand on open ground overlooking the valley of the Gala Water. Like many rural monuments in Scotland, the site is preserved through legal protection and land management rather than reconstruction.
Bow Castle is one of only a few brochs known in the Scottish Borders, alongside Torwoodlee Broch and Edin's Hall Broch. These sites help archaeologists understand how broch building spread beyond its northern Scottish heartlands into communities living near the Roman frontier during the Iron Age.
The monument lies within farmland near Stow of Wedale and can be reached on foot across the surrounding landscape. It has no visitor facilities, but the circular outline of the broch can still be seen in the ground.
References
- ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Bow Castle, broch 1000m E of Bow (SM1162)". Retrieved 13 March 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Historic Environment Scotland. "Bow Castle (Site no. NT44SE 3)". Retrieved 25 June 2025.
- ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Bow Castle, broch 1000m E of Bow (SM1162)". Retrieved 13 March 2019.
- ^ "Scheduled monuments". Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 10 March 2026.
Further reading
- Curle, J. (1892) 'Notes on two brochs recently discovered at Bow, Midlothian, and Torwoodlee, Selkirkshire', Proc Soc Antiq Scot, vol. 26, Pages 68–70
External links
Media related to Bow Castle Broch at Wikimedia Commons