In the first of two features about early scripts in Britain, we visit north-east Scotland, where Pictish symbol stones tease the imagination with their appealing designs and mysterious origins. A new project has dated them, finding they were inspired by contact with the Roman world, like runes and ogham. Gordon Noble, Martin Goldberg and Derek Hamilton report
The Picts lived in the east of Scotland, north of the Firth of Forth. They were the descendants of i...
Many prehistoric societies have left a wealth of inscribed symbols for which the meanings are lost. ...
This AHRC funded project entitled 'Technologies of enchantment: Celtic Art in Iron Age and Roman Bri...
During the Roman occupation and conquest of regions that today form England and Scotland, Roman gene...
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...
In 1993, Anders Andrén observed that the best parallels for the unique Gotlandic picture ston...
The Pictish Symbol Stones are a collection of finely carved stones dating from ca. 300 AD to 843 AD ...
Scotland’s corpus of early medieval carved stone monuments is a rich dataset for explorations of cul...
The particulars of religion in pre-Christian Pictland have quite understandably eluded researchers. ...
This paper offers and update on work at the important high status Pictish site at Rhynie, Aberdeensh...
The Pictish ogham inscriptions as a group; the ogham alphabet borrowed from the Irish; differences f...
A small number of Pictish symbol stones demonstrate evidence for multiple lives within the Early His...
Former sea caves in East Wemyss, Scotland are special because of historic carvings within them. Thes...
The Picts inhabited most of Scotland in the first millennium of the Common Era. While we know from s...
The Picts lived in the east of Scotland, north of the Firth of Forth. They were the descendants of i...
Many prehistoric societies have left a wealth of inscribed symbols for which the meanings are lost. ...
This AHRC funded project entitled 'Technologies of enchantment: Celtic Art in Iron Age and Roman Bri...
During the Roman occupation and conquest of regions that today form England and Scotland, Roman gene...
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...
In 1993, Anders Andrén observed that the best parallels for the unique Gotlandic picture ston...
The Pictish Symbol Stones are a collection of finely carved stones dating from ca. 300 AD to 843 AD ...
Scotland’s corpus of early medieval carved stone monuments is a rich dataset for explorations of cul...
The particulars of religion in pre-Christian Pictland have quite understandably eluded researchers. ...
This paper offers and update on work at the important high status Pictish site at Rhynie, Aberdeensh...
The Pictish ogham inscriptions as a group; the ogham alphabet borrowed from the Irish; differences f...
A small number of Pictish symbol stones demonstrate evidence for multiple lives within the Early His...
Former sea caves in East Wemyss, Scotland are special because of historic carvings within them. Thes...
The Picts inhabited most of Scotland in the first millennium of the Common Era. While we know from s...
The Picts lived in the east of Scotland, north of the Firth of Forth. They were the descendants of i...
Many prehistoric societies have left a wealth of inscribed symbols for which the meanings are lost. ...
This AHRC funded project entitled 'Technologies of enchantment: Celtic Art in Iron Age and Roman Bri...