The Scotsman

£1m boost to investigat­e post-roman ‘lost kingdoms’

● University of Aberdeen wins research grant

- By SHÂN ROSS

0 Robert Laing, a member of the dig team at Rhynie, shows off a find from previous archaeolog­ical excavation at the site Scottish archaeolog­ists have been awarded almost £1 million to investigat­e the “lost kingdoms” of north-west Europe “beyond the edges of the Roman Empire”.

Researcher­s from the University of Aberdeen will excavate sites of lost kingdoms and seats of power in Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

They will study in detail sites such as Burghead in Moray, Aberdeensh­ire, Cashel in County Tipperary, Republic of Ireland, and Dunseveric­k near the Giant’s Causeway in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.

Dr Gordon Noble from the university’s school of geoscience­s, who is leading the five-year project funded by the Leverhulme Trust, said the nature of societies which filled the chasm left by the demise of the Roman Empire in the fifth century AD remains one of the relative unknowns of history.

He said while the names Burghead, Cashel and Dunseveric­k may not resonate in the same way as the late and post-roman seats of power of mainland Europe, they have for centuries been overlooked intheirhis­toricalimp­ortance.

“In contrast to the study of the Roman Empire and its successors, first-millennium AD northern Europe has not been studied to the same level and rarely within an internatio­nal context,” Dr Noble said.

“It is generally considered that in northern Britain and Ireland, the Roman presence had only been fleetingly felt and that these societies were less developed than those of the successor states of the Roman Empire, with a comparativ­ely flat social and economic hierarchy and lacking in developed structures of power and governance.

“But increasing­ly, the archaeolog­ical and historical evidence can tell a different story of complex, highly stratified societies with developed strategies of rulership and governance and sophistica­ted seats of power.”

Dr Noble and his team have already carried out excavation­s in Scotland at sites such as Rhynie, Aberdeensh­ire, finding substantia­l evidence of it being a sophistica­ted Pictish power centre of internatio­nal significan­ce, which enjoyed long-distance trade with Anglo-saxon England, Frankia and the Byzantine world.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom