The Scotsman

Secrets of Culloden Battlefiel­d revealed in most detailed map

- By ALISON CAMPSIE alison.campsie@jpimedia.co.uk

Anew map of Culloden Battlefiel­d has unlocked new insight on the landscape where soldiers clashed 275 years ago.

Thousands of airborne laser scans have been taken of the battlefiel­d, with the data allowing conservati­onists to see exactly how the land lay on April 16, 1746 when Jacobites met the British Army in the last battle of the failed 1745 rising.

The latest LIDAR (light detection and ranging) technology has allowed National Trust for Scotland (NTS) to peel away changes to the landscape over time to see how it appeared 275 years ago

NTS said the map “shed new insight” on the topography of Culloden and what soldiers would have been able to see as the battle unfolded shortly after 1pm.

Derek Alexander, head of archaeolog­y at National Trust for Scotland, said: “These maps give us the most detailed understand­ing currently possible of how the landscape looked in 1746.

"Thanks to 21st-century technology, we can use these to get a feel for what soldiers on the battlefiel­d would actually have been able to see of their opponents, their positions and their weaponry. In terms of understand­ing the tactics and the outcome, it’s a really powerful tool.”

The maps will be unveiled to the public for the first time at an online event today, which will commemorat­e the 275th anniversar­y of the battle.

The maps have been created by AOC Archaeolog­y and also include layers that show where archaeolog­ical excavation­s have happened over the years and the objects that have been found there.

Finds include buttons and buckles torn off in the struggle, musket balls, a bayonet, a king’s shilling and a pewter cross.

Raoul Curtis-machin, operations manager at Culloden, said the maps would help with the conservati­on and the protection of the battlefiel­d.

Around a third of the battlefiel­d is owned by NTS with the remainder in private hands and vulnerable from housing developmen­t.

Views from the Culloden memorial cairn now include 16 homes that were built within the historic boundary of the battlefiel­d.

On Friday, on the anniversar­y of the battle, NTS made its strongest plea yet that battlefiel­ds are protected in law like scheduled monuments and listed buildings.

Politician­s have been urged to support a change to planning policy as well as Culloden’s applicatio­n for Unesco World Heritage Site status.

Raoul Curtis-machin, operations manager at Culloden, said: “These maps aren’t just for the past, they’ll also help us to protect Culloden for the future.

"Their detailed informatio­n gives us a clear understand­ing of how the site has been altered through building and developmen­t over the centuries, all of which is invaluable as we strive to retain all that is special about this site that is of such significan­ce to Scotland’s story.”

Details found within the new map will be presented as part of NTS’S online commemorat­ions of the battle today.

Events will begin with an address from Martin Macgregor, chief of the Gaelic Society of Inverness, and a new Gaelic poem by Maoilios Caimbeul.

From 10am, Dr Darren S Layne will talk on the enduring appeal of Culloden with Peter Pininski, art historian and direct descendant of Bonnie Prince Charlie, to explore flaws of the Jacobite leader.

 ??  ?? 0 A new map of Culloden Battlefiel­d gives fresh insight into how the land lay on April 16, 1746 when Jacobites clashed with the British Army in the last act of the failed rising led by Bonnie Prince Charlie
0 A new map of Culloden Battlefiel­d gives fresh insight into how the land lay on April 16, 1746 when Jacobites clashed with the British Army in the last act of the failed rising led by Bonnie Prince Charlie

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