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Bunrannoch House is a site of prehistoric and medieval settlement and agricultural remains located in Perthshire, Scotland, situated approximately 340 metres west-south-west of the house itself. The site comprises evidence of occupation and land use spanning multiple periods from prehistoric times through the medieval era, indicating sustained human habitation and exploitation of the landscape across several millennia. The remains include traces of settlement structures and associated agricultural features characteristic of long-term settlement activity. The archaeological evidence at Bunrannoch reflects the pattern of land use typical of upland and marginal areas in central Scotland, where communities adapted their settlement and farming practices across the prehistoric and medieval periods.
Bunrannoch House, prehistoric and medieval settlement and agricultural remains 340m WSW and 85m NW of is a scheduled monument protected by Historic Environment Scotland under reference SM13712. View the official record →
Bunrannoch House is a site of prehistoric and medieval settlement and agricultural remains located in Perthshire, Scotland, situated approximately 340 metres west-south-west of the house itself. It is designated a Scheduled Ancient Monument by Historic Environment Scotland under reference SM13712.
Bunrannoch House, prehistoric and medieval settlement and agricultural remains 340m WSW and 85m NW of dates from the medieval period, and is classified as a prehistoric and medieval settlement and agricultural remains 340m wsw and. It is one of over 32,000 scheduled monuments protected across Britain.
Bunrannoch House, prehistoric and medieval settlement and agricultural remains 340m WSW and 85m NW of is a Scheduled Ancient Monument, legally protected by Historic Environment Scotland — the body responsible for designating and safeguarding heritage sites in Scotland. The official designation reference is SM13712.
Several scheduled monuments lie within 10 km, including Clach na Boile,standing stone (0.8 km), Lassintullich,St Blane's Chapel NNE of (3.3 km), Invervar, shrunken township, Glen Lyon (9.4 km).
Aubrey generates in-depth historical research for any address in Britain — drawing on scheduled monument data, Domesday records, Roman heritage, PAS finds and medieval history to reveal the complete story of a landscape.
Research the area around Bunrannoch House, prehistoric and medieval settlement and agricultural remains 340m WSW and 85m NW of