The Sunday Telegraph

Catapult stone found at Edinburgh Castle

- By Daily Telegraph Reporter

ARCHAEOLOG­ISTS have unearthed a large stone ball thought to have been launched from a powerful medieval catapult during a siege of Edinburgh Castle.

The large carved stone looks like a cannonball but has been dated to the 13th century, more than 200 years before the introducti­on of gunpowder or cannons in Scotland.

It was found during excavation­s at the Grassmarke­t in Edinburgh as archaeolog­ists from AOC Archaeolog­y continue to investigat­e the site, which has been earmarked for Europe’s first Virgin Hotel.

It is thought the ball was launched from a large wooden catapult known as a trebuchet, either from or towards the ramparts of Edinburgh Castle in the period of the Siege of Edinburgh in 1296.

The siege saw Edward I capture Edinburgh Castle and hold it under English rule for 18 years, plundering treasure from across Scotland including the Stone of Destiny in the process.

Richard Conolly, of CgMs Heritage, which is managing the work, said: “As archaeolog­ists, most of our work deals with the remnants of day-to-day life, so it is really exciting for the team to find something that potentiall­y provides a direct link to a historic event and specific date.

“The siege only lasted three days – we don’t often get that kind of preci- sion in our dating. It is also a reminder that it was not just the castle that was involved in the siege; the surroundin­g town must also have taken a battering.”

Over the centuries around 23 different siege attempts were made on Edinburgh Castle and experts have been intrigued by the latest discovery.

John Lawson, a City of Edinburgh council archaeolog­ist, said: “It looks like the type of ball which would have been fired by a trebuchet… the most famous account of a trebuchet is that of Warwolf, the giant catapult used by Edward I’s army at Stirling Castle in 1304.

“What we’ve discovered here suggests similar weapons were also used in Edinburgh, possibly even during Edward I’s Siege of Edinburgh in 1296.”

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