Heritage: Unlocking the secrets of the Picts like never before
Authority on the mysterious people who vanished from Scotland after 500 years hails ‘golden spell’ of discovery, writes Alison Campsie
They were the last major ethnic identity to become extinct in Britain with few clues left behind to help unravel the story of these mysterious people found in the north and east of Scotland.
Now, a leading archaeologist has hailed a ‘golden spell’ in new discoveries about the Picts, with their everyday world now illuminated like never before.
Professor Gordon Noble, head of archaeology at Aberdeen University, has led several major excavations that have increased understanding of the people who emerged during the time of Roman rule of Britain but whose language, culture and identity disappeared after 500 years.
Only a few written sources which reference the Picts exist and only a small number of places where they once lived and ruled have so far been found.
But Professor Noble said understanding of the Picts had “grown immensely” since the early 2000s with new large scale archaeological investigations helping to piece together their story in a level of detail not previously known.
The discovery of evidence of wine drinking, elaborate metal working and connections to European trade routes at Rhynie in Aberdeenshire, a probable royal residence during the 6th and 7th Century, was described as a ‘watershed moment’ by Professor Noble, who led excavations of the site as part of the Northern Picts project.
The same project has also examined in detail Fortriu, the Pictish kingdom long thought to be centred around Perthshire but now known to be based on the southern shores of the Moray Firth.
The excavation of a Pictish monastery at Portmahomack by Dr Martin Carver of York University and the discovery of evidence of book production at the site has been another important development.
He added: “There is a golden spell at the moment with many active projects across Scotland by universities and communities and other organisations. Previous studies on Pictish power centres has taken a very minimal, keyhole approach.
“Uncovering settlement and early church remains at sites like Rhynie and Portmahomack have began to reveal the everyday world of the Picts on a more detailed level than has been previously documented.”
Last year, a new way of dating Pictish stones significantly “pushed back” the chronology of these often iconic monuments.
The earliest stones, found at the remains of an old Pictish fort at Dunnicaer sea stack near Dunnottar Castle, Stonehaven, are now known to have been created between the 3rd and 4th Century AD. Previously, the earliest examples were dated to anywhere between the 5th and 7th centuries.
The new dates showed the Picts were innovators in communication and were doing so around the same time writing systems were being developed across Europe, such as the Ogham script of early Ireland and the Scandinavian runic system.
Professor Noble said a lack of sites linked to the Picts was among the greatest challenges in researching the people and their time.
He said: “There are still very few Pictish sites compared to the Iron Age for example. In particular we have very few settlements other than elite examples.”
He said that understanding of the Picts “not complete at all and never will be” given the slim historical sources of the time. But this is where archaeology is so important – we can and will uncover so much more if we can raise the appropriate funding to do so,” he added.
He said the next big research areas were likely to be the transition from the Pictish era to the Viking Age dawned and the disappearance of Picts as an identity and language.
Professor Noble added: “The Picts are such an important element of Scotland’s early history and despite the recent developments, we can still know a lot more than we do.”