Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Torhouse

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Alternate name
  
Torhousekie

Type
  
Stone circle

Ownership
  
Historic Scotland

Owner
  
Historic Scotland

Location
  
Galloway

Periods
  
Neolithic / Bronze Age

Public access
  
Yes

Torhouse

Address
  
4m west of on the, B733, Wigtown, Newton Stewart, United Kingdom

Hours
  
Open today · Open 24 hoursMondayOpen 24 hoursTuesdayOpen 24 hoursWednesdayOpen 24 hoursThursdayOpen 24 hoursFridayOpen 24 hoursSaturdayOpen 24 hoursSundayOpen 24 hoursSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Cairnholy, Barsalloch Fort ‑ Historic S, Chapel Finian, Glenluce Abbey, Carsluith Castle

Torhouse stone circle on the summer solstice 2014


The Standing Stones of Torhouse (also Torhousekie) are a stone circle of nineteen granite boulders on the land of Torhouse, three miles west of Wigtown, Scotland.

Contents

Torhousekie standing stones


Description

The stone circle consists of nineteen granite boulders set on a slightly raised platform. The stones have a height ranging from about 0.6 metres to 1.5 metres and are arranged in a circle with a diameter of about 22 metres. The larger stones, over 1 metre high, are on the southeast side.

Three upright boulders stand in a line near the centre of the circle. The direction of the line of the three central stones is northeast to southwest.

Two stones stand 40 metres to the south-southeast of the stone circle, one large and the other small, and there is a stone row of three stones 130 metres to the east. There are also surviving remains of several burial cairns, and history records others long removed to build field dykes.

The stone circle has not yet been archaeologically excavated. It probably dates to the Neolithic period or the Bronze Age. The Torhouse Stones are in the care of Historic Scotland.

In folklore

Local tradition maintains that the three large stones in the middle of the circle contained the tomb of Galdus, a mythical Scottish king. A similar story is told about one of the tombs at Cairnholy, also in Galloway.

In the dyke on the south side of the road is a stone with a deep cavity which according to tradition, "the knowing never pass without depositing therein some pebble or gift to pass in peace".

References

Torhouse Wikipedia