The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Standing Stones:

Project paints a picture of Pictish life to challenge ‘savage’ reputation.

- richard watt riwatt@thecourier.co.uk

A new project may rock modern ideas that the ancient Picts were “savages”, according to an Angus expert.

The Picts harried the Romans so much the occupying force built a wall to protect themselves from the depredatio­ns of the “painted ones”.

Beside archaeolog­ical evidence left in iron age settlement­s between the Forth and the Highlands, little is known about the Picts and no evidence of their language survives.

The biggest clues to their activities, battles and relationsh­ip with early Christiani­ty lie in their ornately carved stones.

Historic Environmen­t Scotland (HES) has commission­ed a series of fullcolour versions of significan­t stones, including those of Angus and Highland Perthshire.

It is hoped the versions will mirror how the originals looked before 1,500 years of wind and rain brought them back to bare stone.

Historian Norman Atkinson was consulted on the project regarding the four Aberlemno stones.

“Some visitors will certainly find the coloured illustrati­ons helpful, but to others they will be misleading, so it’s a real case of swings and roundabout­s,” he said.

“I would hope that they will help more folk realise that the Picts were not uneducated savages, who did have a rich cultural background and appreciate­d fine things.

“It’s not a new theory, since I had casts of the Inchbrayoc­k stone in Montrose Museum painted in the 1980s, and they’re still on display.

“I seem to remember archaeolog­ists in Orkney finding a symbol stone which had traces of coloured pigment on it, so there is some evidence.

“Their painting abilities, especially considerin­g illuminate­d manuscript­s are not in question.”

Stones with the new interpreta­tion panels include the Aberlemno II stone, which is commonly interprete­d to show the Battle of Dun Nechtain in 685AD, in which a Pictish army defeated invaders from Northumbri­a.

The Dunfalland­y Stone in Pitlochry may represent the biblical meeting of St Paul and St Anthony, or the conversion of a significan­t Scottish figure from paganism.

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 ??  ?? Coloured representa­tions of the Aberlemno II and Dunfalland­y stones.
Coloured representa­tions of the Aberlemno II and Dunfalland­y stones.
 ?? Picture: Kim Cessford. ?? Norman Atkinson, who was consulted on the project.
Picture: Kim Cessford. Norman Atkinson, who was consulted on the project.

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