Shieling

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Ruined sheiling south of Oban

A shieling (Scottish Gaelic: àirigh, Cornish: kavos[1]), also spelt sheiling, sheeling, and shealing,[2] is a hut, or collection of huts, once common in a wild or lonely place in the hills and mountains of Scotland and northern England. The word also refers to a mountain pasture used for the grazing of cattle in summer.

Etymology

The term is mainly Scottish, originally denoting a summer dwelling on a seasonal pasture high in the hills,[3] particularly for shepherds and later coming to mean a more substantial and permanent small farm building in stone. The first recorded use of the term is from 1568.[4] The term is from shiel, from the Northern dialect Middle English forms schele or shale, probably akin to Old Frisian skul meaning 'hiding place' and to Old Norse Skjol meaning 'shelter' and Skali meaning 'hut'.[5]

Seasonal dwelling

A sheiling close to the Loch Langavat path, Isle of Lewis

Farmers and their families lived in shielings during the summer to have their livestock graze common land. Shielings were therefore associated with the transhumance system of agriculture. The huts generally fell out of use by the end of the 17th century, although in remote areas this system continued into the 18th.[6]

Ruins of shielings are abundant in high or marginal land in Scotland and N. England, along with "shield" place-names or their Gaelic equivalents. Some were constructed of turf and tend to gradually erode and disappear but traces of stone-built structures persist. The few archaeological investigations of shielings which have been published reveal very few finds to enable accurate dating, but shielings can sometimes be shown to be mediaeval in origin and were occasionally occupied permanently after abandonment of the transhumance system. The construction of associated structures such as stack-stands and enclosures indicate that they may have become farmsteads, some of which evolved into modern farms; in other cases it is thought that they were occupied by gypsies.

In his 1899 book The Lost Pibroch, Neil Munro refers to the sheiling as something temporary: "the women, posting blankets for the coming sheiling..."; [7] "It was about the time Antrim... came scouring through our glens..., with not a sheiling from end to end, except on the slopes of Shira Glen...";[8] "...for never a sheiling passed but the brosey folks came pouring down Glenstrae, scythe, sword, and spear, and went back with the cattle before them..."[9]

Memories in folksong and poetry

18th-century shielings on the isle of Jura, from Thomas Pennant's Scottish Tour of 1772

The well-known folksong Mairi's Wedding contains the phrase "past the shieling, through the town" which helps protect this word from obscurity. A Gaelic song (covered on Uam by Julie Fowlis) is Bothan Àirigh am Bràigh Raithneach ("A shieling on the Braes of Rannoch"),[10] while the 'weaver poet' Robert Tannahill's song to "Gilly Callum" begins "I'll hie me to the shieling hill, And bide amang the braes, Callum..."[11]

The temporary nature of the sheiling, and its location high in the Scottish hills is alluded to in the musicologist William Sharp's Sheiling Song of 1896, which he published under the pseudonym "Fiona MacLeod": "I go where the sheep go, with the sheep are my feet... O lover, who loves me, Art thou half so fleet? Where the sheep climb, the kye go, There shall we meet!" (Kye means "cattle".)[12]

The sheiling could be on a Scottish island, as in Marjory Kennedy-Fraser's delicate tune "An island sheiling", recorded on "Songs of the Hebrides" by Florence McBride.[13][14] Edward Thomas's poem "The Sheiling" evokes the loneliness of a quiet old highland building that "stands alone/Up in a land of stone...A land of rocks and trees..."[15]

Surviving shielings in Scotland and elsewhere

A colourful sheiling of non-traditional materials on Lewis

Among the many surviving buildings named sheiling is Sheiling Cottage, Rait, Perth and Kinross, an 18th century cottage of clay-bonded rubble, originally roofed in thatch, now in slate.[16][lower-alpha 1]

The 'Lone Sheiling', built in 1942 in Canada's Cape Breton Highlands National Park, is modelled on a Scottish 'bothran' or shepherds' hut of the type that was used during the summer when it was possible to move the sheep up on to the hills to graze. It has the same design as the Lone Sheiling on the Scottish isle of Skye,[17] romanticised in the lines "From the lone sheiling of the misty island/Mountains divide us and the waste of seas — Yet still the blood is strong, the heart is Highland, And we in dreams behold the Hebrides."[3]

Derek Cooper, in his 1983 book on Skye, suggests that the isolation of sheilings gave opportunity for "sexual experiment[ation]", and in evidence identifies a moor named "Araidh na suiridh", the bothy of lovemaking.[3] The song Bothan Àirigh am Bràigh Raithneach confirms this with the verse "And we'll rear them in a sheiling on the Braes of Rannoch, in the brush-wood enclosed hut of dalliance."[10]

The buildings on the moors were repaired each summer when the people arrived with their cattle; they made butter and cheese, and "gruthim", salted buttered curds.[3]

See also

Notes

  1. However, the cottage may be named for the nearby horseshoe-shaped farmstead.

References

  1. George, Ken (2000). Gerlyver Kernewek Kemmyn: Cornish Dictionary. Cornwall, UK: Kesva an Taves Kernewek. p. 54. ISBN 0-907064-79-5. 
  2. "Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary: Sheeling". Encyclo.co.uk. 1913. Retrieved 26 March 2013. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Cooper, 1983. pp. 124–125
  4. "Free Merriam-Webster Dictionary". shieling. Merriam-Webster. 2013. Retrieved 5 May 2013. 
  5. "shiel". Webster's Third New International Dictionary 3 (3 ed.). Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1986. p. 2094. 
  6. As discussed in "Britain and Ireland 1050-1530: Economy and Society", By R. H. Britnell, pg 209.
  7. Munro, 1899. p. 35
  8. Munro, 1899. p. 52
  9. Munro, 1899. p. 134
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Na h-òrain air 'Uam' / The songs on 'Uam'". Julie Fowlis. 2011. Retrieved 8 July 2013. 
  11. "I'll Hie Me to the Shieling Hill". Glasgow Guide. Retrieved 5 May 2013. 
  12. Sharp, William (1896). "The Lied, Art Song, and Choral Texts Archive: Sheiling song". RecMusic.org. Retrieved 26 March 2013. 
  13. "Songs of the Hebrides, Part 1: Birlinn of Clanranald / An island sheiling / Cockle gatherer". DB 591 (WA 10954). Columbia. Recorded 5 December 1930. Retrieved 26 March 2013. 
  14. "Discography section 14: Ma-McKay". National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 26 March 2013. 
  15. Thomas, Edward (1878–1917). "The First World War Poetry Digital Archive: The Sheiling". OUCS.ox.ac.uk (originally Faber & Faber). Retrieved 26 March 2013. 
  16. Canmore database (11 September 2012). "Canmore: Rait, The Sheiling". Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 26 March 2013. 
  17. "Lone Sheiling". Canada's Historic Places. 2 June 1994. Retrieved 26 March 2013. 

Bibliography

External links

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