- Keeill
keeill (variations - keill, keeil) is a
Manx Gaelic word for a chapel.History and siting
Archaeologically, it is used for a specific type of small simple chapel found on the
Isle of Man and built during the early medieval period. Some similar sites have been identified onIslay (Megaw 1978:298; Swift 1987).The earliest versions of the structures are all thought to have been lost, and only their later replacements (mostly in use between the 8th and 12th centuries) survive. These survivors vary in size and arrangement, and include examples constructed in unhewn or roughly worked stones, stone-revetted turf and timber-laced rubble. Beneath some sites remnants of clay daub have been found (Megaw 1978:298), while traces of wall plaster have also been discovered. Keeills may have fallen out of use following the arrival of
Viking settlers on the Island, but were then re-established, on the same sites in some cases, once the Vikings had converted toChristianity .A number of keeills were built on a natural or artificial mound, often the site of earlier burials or monuments (eg
Bronze-Age barrow mounds) (Lowe and Reilly 1988) and/or near a spring orholy well (achibbyr ). Many keeills are surrounded by cemeteries, some of which may have originated in pagan society. Some keeills are enclosed by a turf bank. The area of ground bounded by such a bank can vary considerably and may represent earlier, pre-Christian use.Number
At least 174 keeills have been recorded on the Island, out of probably over 200, though only 35 can be easily identified today. Records are made up of extant sites, potential remains, place-name records and folk memory. The nature of some of this evidence is sufficient to cast doubt on the reliability of the total record. Most of the sites have either been lost ("eg" when a later medieval church such as
Kirk Maughold orKirk Christ Malew was built on top of or in place of one), or destroyed when excavated by Victorian and Edwardianantiquarian s looking for ground plans and treasure rather thanstratigraphy and finds.ize, layout and comparisons
We do know that while different keeills were broadly similar in their layout they varied considerably in size.
Carl J S Marstrander , a Norwegian professor who carried out what remains the most extensive survey of keeills on the Isle of Man in the 1930s, described this variation: :'The Ballachrink keeill in Marown measures only 10 feet × 6 feet inside. Otherwise they may attain 23 feet × 13 feet (Keeill Vian, Lonan), even 57 feet × 18 feet (St Patrick's Chapel, Patrick's Isle), and 75 feet × 24 feet (St. Trinian's, Marown). The walls vary in thickness from 2 feet 4 inches to 4 feet 8 inches and are, on the outside, protected by an embankment of earth and stones, in height 2-5 feet, in depth 4-10 feet.'Marstrander's inclusion of the notably larger structures he mentions here is now deprecated, in view of their later date.
:...'The shape is rectangular with no division between nave and chancel. The door, which is narrow and tapering towards the top, is usually situated in the western gable. The window – as a rule only one – is built at a height of 2-3 feet above the floor. The altar is invariably placed against the eastern wall, attaining a height of about 2 feet.'
Detailed work drawing comparisons with sites in the Northern Isles has been undertaken by Lowe (1987), and with those on Islay, by Swift (1987).
Time Team
The keeill excavated in 2007 by
Time Team fitted into Marstrander's general pattern, in terms of walls, rectangular shape, lack of identifiable internal divisions, and having a single narrow entrance and an eastern altar.External links
* [http://www.isleofman.com/Community/ePedia/History/Sites/Keeills.aspx www.isleofman.com] - Information about Keeills in the Isle of Man
* [http://www.channel4.com/history/microsites/T/timeteam//2007_iom.html Time Team dig]References
Lowe, C E. (1987) 'Early Ecclesiastical Sites in the Northern Isles and Isle of Man: An Archaeological Field Survey', Unpublished DPhil thesis, University of Durham
Lowe, C E and Reilly, P. (1988) 'Keeills in a Landscape: Some New Light', Landscape History, 10, 37-49
Marstrander, C J S. (1932) 'Treen og Keeill', Norsk Tidsskrift for Sprogvidenskap 8, 287-500
Megaw, B R S. (1978) 'Norseman and Native in the Kingdom of the Isles: a re-assessment of the Manx evidence', in P J Davey (ed), Man and Environment in the Isle of Man, British Archaeological Reports (British Series), 54, 265-314
Swift, C J. (1987) 'Irish influence on ecclesiastical settlements in Scotland. A case study of the Island of Islay', unpublished MPhil thesis, University of Durham
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