Images

Image of Rigg (Promontory Fort) by LesHamilton

Rigg Promontory Fort viewed from the car-park 130 metres above.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Rigg (Promontory Fort) by LesHamilton

Rigg Promontory Fort viewed from half-way down the slope.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Rigg (Promontory Fort) by LesHamilton

Looking into the peninsula with the remains of the separating wall in the middle ground.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Rigg (Promontory Fort) by LesHamilton

Remains of the wall from the southwest, showing the entrance passage at lower right.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Rigg (Promontory Fort) by LesHamilton

The remains of the two-metre thick wall isolating the promontory from the mainland. Both inner and outer wall faces are still well defined.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Rigg (Promontory Fort) by LesHamilton

Large foundation level blocks on the outer face of the wall.

Image credit: Les Hamilton
Image of Rigg (Promontory Fort) by LesHamilton

Rigg Promontory Fort, guarded by vertical cliffs to its south.

Image credit: Les Hamilton

Articles

Rigg

Visited: September 5, 2017

Though not highlighted on the OS Map, there is a lay-by at NC521581 just east of the A855 Portree to Staffin road, and this is the starting point for a visit to the remains of Rigg Promontory Fort. Be advised though, that this lay-by is deeply rutted – more like the surface of the Moon than a car-park. So drive with care.

From the lay-by, Rigg Fort is visible 130 metres below at the foot of a seriously steep, grassy hillside, as a triangular, grassy peninsula flanked on both sides by vertical 15 metre high cliffs. I would not recommend a descent unless you have a good head for heights, are an experienced hill walker and are equipped with stout hillwalking boots.

Nevertheless, the descent provides few terrors and the gradient, through grass and short bracken, can be eased by careful zigzagging on the way down. Remember: you will have to climb back up again, so a degree of fitness is essential.

The remains of Rigg fort consist of a wall, at least two metres thick, which completely cuts off the grassy peninsula. Only the inner and outer foundation courses, consisting of sturdy boulders, remain today, but it must have been a formidable barrier in its time. There is no sign of walling round the perimeter of the fort, but the vertical cliffs all around would have deterred any intruder. The peninsula abuts a narrow coastal plain where sheep graze today and where a community could have subsisted in isolation. A stream nearby would be a ready source of water.

There are distinct similarities between the Rigg Fort and Dun Grugaig near Glasnakille. Both fortifications consist of a thick wall that isolates a narrow, cliff-girt peninsula from the mainland. In the case of Dun Grugaig, there remains significant broch-like galleried architecture in the protecting wall, which in places stands four metres tall. At Rigg, the wall is reduced to its foundation level, but who knows what it might have looked like in its prime.

Sites within 20km of Rigg