The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Pictish discovery may rewrite history books

ARCHAEOLOG­Y: Newly-uncovered site said to be unlike others and ‘almost urban in scale’

- CONOR RIORDAN

Archaeolog­ists have unearthed a “mind-blowing” Pictish site believed to be the largest ever discovered.

The settlement perched on the Tap o’ Noth hill near Rhynie in Aberdeensh­ire is among the most extensive examples of ancient life ever found in Scotland.

It encloses around 17 acres and was constructe­d in the fifth to sixth centuries.

The settlement would have held as many as 4,000 people, a scale which experts thought was not reached until the 12th Century in Scotland.

Professor Gordon Noble, who led the Aberdeen University research, said: “Over the last two years we have been investigat­ing the lower fort at Tap o’ Noth, which is enclosed by a rampart that encircles the lower slopes of the hill.

“The results of the dating were simply incredible.

“They show that the huge fort dated to the Fifth to Sixth Centuries CE and that it was occupied at the same time as the elite complex in the valley at Barflat farm.

“Dating shows that settlement on the hill extended as far back as the Third Century, but both hut platforms excavated also had Fifth to Sixth Century AD phases.”

The Picts were a confederat­ion of Celtic-speaking communitie­s who lived in the east and north of Scotland during the Late British Iron Age and Early Medieval periods.

Distributi­on of the buildings at the site suggests they are likely to have been built and occupied at a similar time because many are positioned alongside trackways or clustered together in groups.

Drone surveys also showed that in these groups was one notably larger hut, indicating there may have been some form of hierarchic­al organisati­on within the fort.

Evidence suggests up to 4,000 people may have lived in more than 800 huts perched high on the hill, and scientists believe each would be occupied by four to five people.

Prof Noble added: “That’s verging on urban in scale, and in a Pictish context we have nothing else that compares to this.

“We had previously assumed that you would need to get to around the 12th Century in Scotland before settlement­s started to reach this size.

“We obviously need to do more to try and date more of the hut platforms given there are hundreds of them, but potentiall­y we have a huge regional settlement with activity emerging in the Late Roman Iron Age and extending to the Sixth Century.

“It is truly mind-blowing and demonstrat­es just how much we still have to learn about settlement around the time that the early kingdoms of Pictland were being consolidat­ed.”

The results of the dating were simply incredible. PROFESSOR GORDON NOBLE

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: Aberdeen University/pa. ?? Archaeolog­ists at work on the “mind-blowing” Tap o’ Noth hill site.
Picture: Aberdeen University/pa. Archaeolog­ists at work on the “mind-blowing” Tap o’ Noth hill site.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom