The Pictish Symbol Stones are a collection of finely carved stones dating from ca. 300 AD to 843 AD whose meaning has been lost in time. Despite attracting linguists and historians alike, as a collection they have been just too small to surrender their secrets. Now, however, Rob Lee, Philip Jonathan and Pauline Ziman have used a technique based on comparative entropy to unwrap some of the mystery of the stones. © 2010 The Royal Statistical Society
Former sea caves in East Wemyss, Scotland are special because of historic carvings within them. Thes...
How can archaeologists interpret ancient art and images if they do not treat them as symbols or sign...
Religious symbols are part of our world, relating to another world. In order to understand the proce...
Many prehistoric societies have left a wealth of inscribed symbols for which the meanings are lost. ...
During the Roman occupation and conquest of regions that today form England and Scotland, Roman gene...
In the first of two features about early scripts in Britain, we visit north-east Scotland, where Pic...
A small number of Pictish symbol stones demonstrate evidence for multiple lives within the Early His...
The date of unique symbolic carvings, from various contexts across north and east Scotland, has been...
Thanks go to Gail Drinkall (Orkney Museum) and our funders: Aberdeenshire Council Archaeology Servic...
Sacred symbols are seen as the representation of culture and beliefs of people which describe how th...
International audienceWe must distinguish between two profoundly different ways of knowing a thing. ...
The particulars of religion in pre-Christian Pictland have quite understandably eluded researchers. ...
In 1993, Anders Andrén observed that the best parallels for the unique Gotlandic picture ston...
Few archaeological finds are as evocative as artifacts inscribed with symbols. Whenever an archaeolo...
UID/HIS/04666/2013It has been a transversal trait of most civilizations, a fact not expressively men...
Former sea caves in East Wemyss, Scotland are special because of historic carvings within them. Thes...
How can archaeologists interpret ancient art and images if they do not treat them as symbols or sign...
Religious symbols are part of our world, relating to another world. In order to understand the proce...
Many prehistoric societies have left a wealth of inscribed symbols for which the meanings are lost. ...
During the Roman occupation and conquest of regions that today form England and Scotland, Roman gene...
In the first of two features about early scripts in Britain, we visit north-east Scotland, where Pic...
A small number of Pictish symbol stones demonstrate evidence for multiple lives within the Early His...
The date of unique symbolic carvings, from various contexts across north and east Scotland, has been...
Thanks go to Gail Drinkall (Orkney Museum) and our funders: Aberdeenshire Council Archaeology Servic...
Sacred symbols are seen as the representation of culture and beliefs of people which describe how th...
International audienceWe must distinguish between two profoundly different ways of knowing a thing. ...
The particulars of religion in pre-Christian Pictland have quite understandably eluded researchers. ...
In 1993, Anders Andrén observed that the best parallels for the unique Gotlandic picture ston...
Few archaeological finds are as evocative as artifacts inscribed with symbols. Whenever an archaeolo...
UID/HIS/04666/2013It has been a transversal trait of most civilizations, a fact not expressively men...
Former sea caves in East Wemyss, Scotland are special because of historic carvings within them. Thes...
How can archaeologists interpret ancient art and images if they do not treat them as symbols or sign...
Religious symbols are part of our world, relating to another world. In order to understand the proce...