The Search for Touchadam Castle, Part 4: A Different Story
After lockdown — and after a chance LiDAR plot in a 2024 talk — we revisited the cobbled area. What we’d assumed was an eighteenth-century midden may be hiding something a great deal older.
News, research updates, and articles from the Stirling Field & Archaeological Society.
After lockdown — and after a chance LiDAR plot in a 2024 talk — we revisited the cobbled area. What we’d assumed was an eighteenth-century midden may be hiding something a great deal older.
Covid stopped us digging in 2020, so we spent the time in the archives instead. Pont, Blaeu, Roy, Grassom, Fleming and a long-dead Society Secretary tell a more complicated story than the one we’d been chasing.
A second season opened a metre west of the 2018 trench — and turned up something completely unexpected: a cobbled surface, a ring of large stones, and a sudden rush of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century pottery.
In 2017 the Society went looking for a long-lost castle in a Cambusbarron wood. We found rocks, a whetstone and a tanged-iron knife — and a puzzle. Paul Sorowka tells the story of the first season.
From volcanic eruptions to glacial sculpting, from Mesolithic whale hunters to 18th-century peat clearers — how the Forth Valley landscape was formed and transformed over millennia.
From Agricola's legions to the Antonine Wall, the Stirling area was a strategic corridor for Rome's conquest of Scotland. Yet remarkable gaps remain in our understanding of how they crossed the Forth.
A Jacobite mansion, a hidden mine shaft and a musket ball — how SFAS volunteers are uncovering centuries of history in the grounds of one of Stirling's most remarkable buildings.
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