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A Neolithic landscape

Midhowe Broch was built on a narrow strip of land beside Eynhallow Sound more than 2,000 years ago. A thick stone barrier and ditch cut across the landward approach to defend it. The rest of the settlement is bordered by the sea – and part of it has already been lost to coastal erosion.

The site is dominated by the broch tower itself, which is surrounded by the remains of other, smaller buildings. They seem to have been built as ancillary houses, but later they were used as workshops. An iron-smelting hearth is still visible in one.

Distant view of Midhowe Broch from across a grassy field, showing the circular stone structure near the shoreline with hills and water in the background.

The heart of the village

The broch tower at Midhowe today stands 4.3m high, but it could have been double this height when fully built. Its narrow entrance faces out to sea, away from the landward approach.

In its interior, visitors can still clearly see:

  • stone partitions

  • a spring-fed water tank

  • a hearth with sockets, which may have held a roasting spit

It’s probably deliberate that the broch towers of Midhowe on Rousay and Gurness on mainland Orkney are visible from one another. These may have been the main strongholds on each side of Eynhallow Sound.

Narrow, stone-lined passageway beside the broch, with layered drystone walls rising on each side and grass covering the tops.
Interior stone features of Midhowe Broch, including low stone basins and upright slabs forming compartments within the ancient structure.
Interior view of Midhowe Broch showing low stone walls, upright slabs, and a paved floor with grassy hills visible through gaps in the ruins.

Statement of Significance

You can find out more about Midhowe Broch in our series of special documents outlining the history and development of Historic Scotland sites.

Read more

Everyday finds

Archaeologists digging here in the 1930s found a remarkable array of everyday artefacts. These included:

  • stone and bone tools, associated with grain processing, spinning and weaving

  • pieces from crucibles and moulds, indicating bronze-working, but rather oddly not iron working

  • a fragment from a Roman bronze vessel

The last item is of special interest to archaeologists. It recalls the proud boast by Roman historian Eutropius in the AD 300s that the king of Orkney had submitted to Emperor Claudius in AD 43.

Close-up of a triangular carved stone basin filled with rainwater, resting on a larger flat stone surface inside the broch.
The broch’s stone entrance framed by stacked slabs, leading into interior chambers filled with upright and fallen stones.
Wide landscape view of Duffus Castle ruins on a grassy hill under a pale sky.

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Discover more on trove.scot

See archive photographs of Midhowe Broch, plus archaeology notes and more on trove.scot. 

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