Eildon Hills Scottish Borders
The Eildon Hills above Melrose in the Scottish Borders are three volcanic hills rising from the surrounding farmland of the Tweed Valley in a distinctive triple profile visible from a wide area of the Borders, providing one of the finest views of any accessible summit in the region and combining a rich geological heritage with a density of archaeological sites that makes them one of the most historically significant hill groups in Scotland. The summit of Eildon Hill North was occupied by a massive Iron Age hill fort, one of the largest in Scotland.
The Iron Age settlement on Eildon Hill North enclosed within its massive ramparts an area of approximately 16 hectares and contained several hundred house platforms, suggesting a population of considerable size in a fortified township that may have been the principal settlement of the Selgovae tribe whose territory covered much of the central Borders. The Roman fort of Trimontium was established at the foot of the hills near present-day Newstead in the first century AD, the Romans recognising the strategic importance of the hills that had already defined this section of the Tweed Valley as a place of authority and power.
The hills are also the setting for the legend of Thomas the Rhymer, the thirteenth-century prophetic poet Thomas of Erceldoune who was said to have been taken to Elfland through a door in the Eildon Hills and to have returned with the gift of prophecy. The combination of the archaeology, the legend and the outstanding views from the summit make the Eildon Hills one of the most rewarding walks in the Borders.