Showing posts with label newsScotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label newsScotland. Show all posts

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Artefacts dating back more than 800 years have been found at the Palace of Holyroodhouse.

Items discovered during excavation work in Edinburgh this year include a 12th-century jug fragment, a horse skeleton and a medieval shoe.

The diets of ambassadors and courtiers at Abbey Strand – during the reigns of Mary, Queen of Scots and James VI – were also revealed by the mass of oyster shells and wine bottles dug up.
Researchers also say wine and spirit containers, food debris and fragments of children’s games give a glimpse of life for the 25 impoverished families living in cramped tenements in the area during the 18th and 19th centuries.

Gordon Ewart of Kirkdale Archaeology, which carried out the work, said: “The survey has provided a unique opportunity to understand more about the fascinating development of the Abbey Strand and its surroundings – and to explore how the site has been the historic and symbolic bridge between the palace and the city of Edinburgh for centuries.”

More than 40 trenches were dug for an archaeological survey as part of the £10 million works to improve the visitor experience at the palace.

Excavations in the Abbey Strand buildings by the Edinburgh-based firm uncovered the earliest evidence of settlement on the site.

Timber posts dating from the 12th century are believed to mark the location of a terrace that led to the then low-lying island on which Holyrood Abbey was built in 1128.

They could also have formed part of a structure used by the workmen who built the Abbey.

One of the earliest finds is a medieval leather shoe from beneath one of the cellars in the Abbey Strand.

The bones of Highland cattle found in the gardens provide evidence of trading between Edinburgh and the Highlands and Western Isles.

The palace is used by the Queen when carrying out official engagements in Scotland.

Queen's Edinburgh Residence Yields 800-Year-Old Artifacts

The Book of Deer Project believe they are on the cusp of finding the location of the lost monastery of Aberdeenshire.

The Book of Deer is a handwritten book of Gospels dated to the 10th century. While the manuscripts that the Book of Deer resembles the most are Irish, scholars have tended to argue for a Scottish origin. Written in Latin, Old Irish, and Scottish Gaelic, it is considered to contain the earliest surviving Gaelic writing from Scotland, making it an important piece of Scotland’s cultural history.

Dr. Michelle Macleod, lecturer in Gaelic at Aberdeen University, explaining the significance of the manuscript:

“The Gaelic notes in the book are the first written examples of Scottish Gaelic. There are some deviations in the language from the shared common Gaelic of Scotland and Ireland which had been used in earlier manuscripts. These deviations, of which there are several, are the first written indication that the languages are separating and would be an indication of what people were likely saying.

“The Book of Deer is a tiny book but it has left a huge legacy for us, not only in the north-east but for the whole of Scotland. We had to wait another 200-300 years after the Book of Deer to find any more evidence of written Scottish Gaelic.”

A group of archaeologists and interested citizens formed the Book of Deer Project, a Scottish charitable incorporated organization that has been working since the 1990s to discover the exact location of the lost monastery in which the Book of Deer was penned.

New discoveries of a hearth and charcoal dated between the 12th and 13th centuries came earlier this year, when the Book of Deer Project changed their focus from fields around the village to land closer to Deer Abbey, the remnants of which still stand. Now, the discovery of a medieval-era game board has the team believing they are closer than ever to discovering the site of the lost monastery.

Layers of charcoal excavated from underneath the disc-shaped game board were dated between the 7th and 8th centuries. While this is significantly older than the Book of Deer, the find suggests that the site was active in the time leading up to the writing of the Book of Deer.

Anne Simpson from the Book of Deer Project said, “The rare gaming board was the star find of the dig, but it’s the carbon dating which really thrills me, being so tantalizingly close to the period of the monastery.”

The find has led many of the experts who work with the Book of Deer Project to believe that the long search for the lost monastery of Aberdeenshire is coming to a close. Bruce Mann, archaeologist for Aberdeenshire Council, commented:

“This radiocarbon date excitingly places at least one of the newly excavated structures in the 8th Century AD.” He added, “While this is earlier than the 10th Century writings, it still provides the first confirmed evidence of any activity before the 13th Century.

“I genuinely think we’re close to solving this long standing mystery.”

Archaeologists Unearth Medieval Game Board During Search for Lost Monastery

Tuesday, August 28, 2018


It is a piece of Scotland’s bloody clan history that has remained hidden for more than 400 years.

But a rare find during an excavation at Dunyvaig Castle on Islay has uncovered the seal of Sir John Campbell of Cawdor.

The artefact dates back to 1600s when the Campbell and MacDonald clans were locked in a violent and bitter feud over Scotland’s islands.

Buried below mounds of rubble, the find - described as “remarkable” and “extremely rare” by archaeologists and historians - was discovered on a hidden clay floor at the historic site.

Archaeologist Dr Darko Mari?evi?, director of the excavation at Dunyvaig, said: “This is a remarkable find. Not only is it a beautiful and well-preserved object, but it comes from the floor of a building that we can now confidently date to the Campbell occupation.

“So buried below this floor, we will have the story of the MacDonald’s – the Lords of the Isles – to reveal.”

Roddy Regan, an archaeologist at Kilmartin Museum, added: “Seals are extremely rare finds. This discovery conjures up an image of a Campbell garrison fleeing from the castle when under attack, dropping and losing one of their most precious items, or maybe the seal had once been hidden within a wall niche and long forgotten.”

Once used to sign and seal charters and legal documents, the seal is a circular disc of lead which carries the inscription IOANNIS CAMPBELL DE CALDER (Calder was the original spelling of Cawdor).

It carries the Cawdor coat of arms with a galley ship and a stag and is dated 1593.

The Campbells and the MacDonald’s fought over Dunyvaig in the early 17th century, with a series of sieges and bombardments of the castle until the Campbells finally prevailed.

Sir John took ownership of Islay in 1615.

Mr Regan added that the seal could have been lost in a later raid in 1646 when Alasdair MacColla, a descendent of the MacDonalds, reclaimed the castle.

He said: “Alasdair MacColla, a descendent of the MacDonalds, retook the castle and installed his elderly father, Colla Ciotach to defend it.

“The castle was immediately besieged again.

“We may have Colla Ciotach’s hasty defences in the form of turf walls built above the already ruined stone walls of Dunyvaig, before he was forced to surrender in 1647 and then hanged from the castle walls.”

The excavation at Dunyvaig is being undertaken by charity Islay Heritage in partnership with the University of Reading.

A team of around 40 experts, including leading archaeologists, geophysicists, scientists and environmentalists, are almost at the end of an initial three-week dig at the castle, which sits in Lagavulin Bay, with further projects planned for next year.

Organisers were keen to use the excavation as a teaching project for current archaeology students and it was one such student, Zoë Wiacek, from the University of Reading, who discovered the seal.

She said: “I removed a piece of rubble and it was just sitting there on the ground. I immediately knew it was an important find, but had no idea what it was.

“I called over my trench supervisor, and when it was lifted, the soil fell away to show the inscription. Then everyone became excited.

“I am so proud to have found something so important for the project and for Islay.”

Professor Steven Mithen, chairperson of Islay Heritage and director of the Dunyvaig Project added: “Coming towards the end of the dig, after the team had worked so hard to move huge amounts of turf and rubble, this has been a thrilling discovery.

“We have found a piece of Islay’s past and Scottish history. We can’t wait to start digging again in 2019.”

Islay Heritage hope to raise further funds to allow excavation work to continue at Dunyvaig over the next five years.

Ancient clan artefact uncovered after being hidden for 400 years

Sunday, August 26, 2018

Over 400 members of the public took part in archaeological excavations at the National Trust for Scotland’s Crathes Castle and Castle Fraser (Muchall-in-Mar), over the last two weekends.

At both locations the work was supervised by the conservation charity’s archaeologists and a team of dedicated archaeological volunteers. The ‘come and have a go’ approach proved very popular with families and attracted both first-timers and seasoned diggers.
Castle Fraser. Picture National Trust

Dr Daniel Rhodes, Trust archaeologist said: ‘Last year at Castle Fraser we found a 16th-century silver coin but this year the evidence appears to focus more on the 17th century. Two copper alloy coins were found, one each at Crathes and Castle Fraser, and both appear to be coins called turners (2 pence) of Charles I from 1632–39.’
17th-century coin uncovered during archaeology events at Castle Fraser and Crathes Castle

A number of pieces of chipped flint suggest prehistoric activity in the area, although a squared-off piece was clearly a gun flint, from a flintlock musket.

Dr Rhodes continued: ‘The mid-17th century was a volatile time in the north-east. Following a peaceful surrender, the Marquis of Montrose camped his royalist army at Crathes in 1645. And sometime between 1653 and 1655 Castle Fraser was attacked by Oliver Cromwell’s General Monk as he suppressed royalist supporters. The concentration of broken window glass around Castle Fraser may be a result of this destruction.’

In addition to the coins and glass, artefacts recovered during the excavation included 19th-century pottery and quantities of 18th-century wine bottles, roof slates and nails.

“It’s great to see so many people come out and take an active part in their heritage. In addition to the protection and promotion of our properties, the Trust is keen to provide engaging experiences and the last two weekends have proved a major success in involving the public in what we do, for the love of Scotland.”
Dr Daniel Rhodes, Trust archaeologist

Public dig uncovers war relic from General Monk’s attack on Castle Fraser

Monday, July 30, 2018

Archaeologists are racing to rescue a building with handprints from one of Europe’s ‘lost people’ – the Picts – before it is swallowed by the tide.

The Picts were a group of tribes who spoke a now-extinct language and lived in parts of Scotland in the late Iron Age and Early Medieval period.

The Smithsonian says the Picts are often described as ‘Europe’s lost people’ because their writings have not survived, and only a handful of sites have been found.

The site located on the Orkney Islands has revealed a sooty imprint of what is believed to be a coppersmith’s hands and knees, which may be 1500 years old.

Dr Stephen Dockrill, Senior Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Bradford, said an analysis of crucible fragments and the floor deposits demonstrated that a coppersmith worked in the building.

“The analysis of the floor enables us to say with confidence where the smith worked, next to a hearth and two stone anvils,” he said in statement.

“The biggest surprise came when we lifted the larger stone anvil and cleaned it; we could see carbon imprints of the smith’s knees and hands.”

The small cellular building, dating to a period between the 6th to 9th century AD, was semi-subterranean.

It was entered via steps and a curved corridor, which would have minimised the amount of light entering the smithy.

Scientific analysis at Bradford will reveal what was on the smith’s hands to produce the prints and explore reasons for their remarkable preservation.

Ancient handprint from 'lost' ancient civilisation discovered

Sunday, September 10, 2017

The Celtic quadrangular hand-bell has been housed at Fortingall church, near Aberfeldy, for 1,200 years, but was recently discovered to be missing.

Police believe the bronze-coated iron bell was taken some time between Sunday September 3 and Friday September 8.

A spokesman for Police Scotland said: “This is a very distinctive artefact and has been in the possession of the Fortingall and Glenlyon Church for about 1200 years, having significant sentimental value although no monetary value.

“The Bell was encased behind a locked metal cage within a niche purposely built into the wall of the church which has been broken into and the bell removed.”

Any information which may lead to the bell’s safe return or if anyone noticed anything suspicious or odd around the bell please contact 101 quoting reference number, CR/23634/17.
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Ancient handbell stolen from remote Highland Perthshire church

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

Archaeologists have located one of the most important buildings in the history of Western European Christianity – but it’s not a vast cathedral or an impressive tomb, but merely a humble wattle and daub hut on a remote windswept island.

Using radiocarbon dating techniques and other evidence, the  scholars –  from the University of Glasgow – believe they have demonstrated that the tiny five-metre square building was almost certainly the daytime home of early medieval Scotland’s most important saint, St Columba.

Located on the island of Iona, off the west coast of Scotland, the unprepossessing hut was probably the first administrative hub of the monastic community he founded – and whose monks, over succeeding centuries, went on to establish similar monasteries in mainland Scotland, in north-east England, in Belgium, in France and in Switzerland.

During much of the Dark Ages, Iona was of critical importance in spreading knowledge, literacy, philosophical ideas and artistic skills throughout large areas of western Europe.

It was probably at Iona that the world’s most famous early illuminated manuscript, the Book of Kells, was produced – and it was from here that the epicentre of early northern English Christianity, the monastery of Lindisfarne was founded.

The story of the discovery of St Columba’s hut is a long but significant one.

For centuries, local Gaelic folk tradition seems to have held that a natural grass-covered rock outcrop (known as the Tòrr an Aba) was specifically associated with an important abbot. What’s more that rocky knoll fitted a late 7th century account describing the location of St Columba’s hut.

Then in the 1950s, a British archaeologist called Charles Thomas excavated the  outcrop and found the burned remains of a wattle and daub hut under a layer of earth and pebbles. He was convinced that it was Iona’s great founding abbot, Columba’s writing cell.

But most scholars did not believe him. It was felt that the evidence was not strong enough and that the hut probably dated from many centuries after St Columba’s time. In 1957, when Thomas found the hut’s burned wood remains, radiocarbon dating had only just been developed the previous year and was in its infancy and very expensive.

The crucial charcoal was therefore not dated and remained for the next 55 years in a series of matchboxes, first in a succession of storerooms and finally in his garage  – but in 2012, he donated them to Historic Scotland (now Historic Environment Scotland).

Then earlier this year two Glasgow University archaeologists  -  Dr Adrián Maldonado and Dr Ewan Campbell  - arranged to have them radiocarbon dated at the Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre .

The results were extraordinary.  They demonstrated that the hut was not a later structure – but did indeed date, in line with Thomas’ theory, to somewhere between 540 and 650 AD.  St Columba was Abbot of Iona from the date of the monastery’s foundation (563 AD) till his death (597 AD).

Additional new evidence shows that, at some stage after his death, a monument (a large cross) was erected on the site of the hut, presumably to commemorate the life and work of the monastery’s famous first abbot.

What’s more, new radiocarbon  investigations by the two Glasgow archaeologists are revealing that, potentially at around the time that monument was built, the Iona monks created what may well be Britain’s very earliest pilgrims road, pre-dating the famous pilgrims route to Thomas Becket’s tomb in Canterbury (made famous by Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales) by up to four centuries.

The archaeologists are currently investigating the possibility that Iona’s pilgrimage route (known for centuries as the Street of the Dead) may have been loosely based on Jerusalem’s Via Dolorosa (the Street of Pain) along which Jesus is said to have walked to his crucifixion.

Significantly, around a century after Columba’s death, his biographer (a monk at Iona called Adomnan) also wrote an account and description of the Christian holy places and pilgrimage destinations of Jerusalem – so we know that Iona’s monks would have been well aware of the concept of pilgrimage.

It’s thought that Iona’s possible version of that Jerusalem prototype was eventually up to 600 metres long and, by the 9th century, may have started at the island’s Bay of the Martyrs (potentially, the site of a terrible massacre of Iona’s monks, carried out by the Vikings in 806) and ended at the tomb of St Columba (where the current abbey is located). Along the route, pilgrims would have passed through a graveyard of monks (possibly including those monks who were martyred by the Vikings) – and by the side of a chapel dedicated to a particular colleague of St Columba who, according to legend, was buried alive by his more normally saintly abbot!

This seemingly unfortunate monk, St Oran – is said to have selflessly volunteered to be buried alive by St Columba as a foundation sacrifice to ensure success in building an important chapel within the monastic complex. The story seems improbable, as human sacrifice would have been anathema to pious Christians like Columba.

However, it is conceivable that the story was inherited from a pre-Christian phase of Iona’s story. Some evidence from around the monastic complex hints at the possibility that it may previously have been a high status or even royal pagan religious site – where such human sacrifices might well have been carried out.

Finally, just before the pilgrims would have arrived at St Columba’s tomb, they would have passed three large sculpted stone crosses (each only around 5 m from the next), commemorating the lives of  St Martin, St Matthew and St John.

Commenting on the hut date findings, Glasgow University archaeologist, Dr Adrián Maldonado, said: “This discovery is massive. St Columba is a key figure in Western Christendom.

“We were granted access to the original finds from Charles Thomas, and we could work on his notes and charcoal samples which were excavated in 1957. Luckily Thomas kept hold of them, as he knew they were important, and because they were kept dry, they were still in a good condition.

“Thomas always believed he and his team had uncovered Columba’s original wooden hut, but they could never prove it because the technology wasn’t there. Radiocarbon dating was in its infancy, it had only been discovered a year earlier in 1956, so there was not a lot they could do with the samples.

“So for us, 60 years later, to be able to send the original samples off to the radiocarbon dating labs and have them come back showing, within the margin of error, as something which may have been built in the lifetime of St Columba, is very exciting.

“This is as close as any archaeologist has come to excavating a structure built during the time of St Columba, and it is a great vindication of the archaeological instincts of Thomas and his team. It is a remarkable lesson in the value of curating excavation archives for as long as it takes, to make sure the material is ready for the next wave of technology.”

The research project has been carried out by the University of Glasgow, supported by Historic Environment Scotland and the National Trust for Scotland.

Professor Thomas Clancy, Celtic and Gaelic historian at the University of Glasgow, said: “The results of the radiocarbon dating are nothing short of exhilarating. The remains on top of Tòrr an Aba had been dismissed as from a much later date. Now we know they belonged to a structure which stood there in Columba’s lifetime. More than that, the dates, and our new understanding of the turning of the site into a monument not long after its use, makes it pretty clear that this was St Columba’s day or writing house. From here, he oversaw the day-to-day activities of his monastery”.

The announcement of the discovery follows the recent unearthing of early medieval remains at another key monastic site –  Lindisfarne, off the coast of Northumberland.

Source

One of the most important buildings in history of Christianity discovered off Scottish coast

The signs aims to highlight the ancient caves’ importance and protect the site from anti-social behaviour.

They warn the sites is a scheduled monument and protected by law so it is an offence to damage it in any way.

Signs tell visits ground disturbance of any form, fires and use of metal detectors are prohibited.

The caves contain a unique collection of Pictish carvings, thought to be the largest concentration in Britain.

But these have become increasingly at risk from coastal erosion and vandalism.

Now, however, the Wemyss Caves Action Group has taken action by agreeing to install the new signs to help combat incidents of littering, graffiti and fire damage to the caves.

The action group consists of stakeholders including the Save Wemyss Ancient Caves Society, Fife Council, Scottish Coastal Archaeology and the Problem of Erosion (SCAPE), Historic Environment Scotland, Fife Coast and Countryside Trust and the Wemyss Estate.

The group is working together in an effort to protect the caves for future generations while making the most of their potential as a heritage site on the Fife Coast.

Plans are now under way to update the existing interpretation boards at the East Wemyss sea front car park which gives visitors information on the historic importance of the site.

SWACS vice chairperson Sue Hamstead said: “This first step we hope will inform visitors of the importance of the caves and deter inappropriate behaviour.

“We will follow up soon with new interpretation boards to replace the somewhat weather worn boards that are in place at present.”

The caves have been nominated to be listed as one of Scotland’s six hidden gems in a national competition by DigIt!2017 as part of Scotland’s Year of History, Heritage and Archaeology.

Meanwhile, SWACS volunteers will be offering guided Super Saturday tours of the caves throughout July.

The tours start at 2pm from the East Wemyss sea front car park.

Source

New signs for ancient caves

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

The fossil of an early snake-like animal — called Lethiscus stocki — has kept its evolutionary secrets for the last 340 million years.

Now, an international team of researchers, led by the University of Calgary, has revealed new insights into the ancient Scottish fossil that dramatically challenge our understanding of the early evolution of tetrapods, or four-limbed animals with backbones.

Their findings have just been published in the prestigious international research journal Nature.

“It forces a radical rethink of what evolution was capable of among the first tetrapods,” said project lead Jason Anderson, a paleontologist and professor at the University of Calgary Faculty of Veterinary Medicine (UCVM).  

Before this study, ancient tetrapods — the ancestors of humans and other modern-day vertebrates — were thought to have evolved very slowly from fish to animals with limbs.

 “We used to think that the fin-to-limb transition was a slow evolution to becoming gradually less fish-like,” he said. “But Lethiscus shows immediate, and dramatic, evolutionary experimentation. The lineage shrunk in size, and lost limbs almost immediately after they first evolved. It’s like a snake on the outside but a fish on the inside.”

Lethicus’ secrets revealed with 3D medical imaging

Using micro-computer tomography (CT) scanners and advanced computing software, Anderson and study lead author Jason Pardo, a doctoral student supervised by Anderson, got a close look at the internal anatomy of the fossilized Lethiscus. After reconstructing CT scans, its entire skull was revealed, with extraordinary results.

“The anatomy didn’t fit with our expectations,” explains Pardo. “Many body structures didn’t make sense in the context of amphibian or reptile anatomy.” But the anatomy did make sense when it was compared to early fish.

“We could see the entirety of the skull. We could see where the brain was, the inner ear cavities. It was all extremely fish-like,” explains Pardo, outlining anatomy that’s common in fish but unknown in tetrapods except in the very first. The anatomy of the paddlefish, a modern fish with many primitive features, became a model for certain aspects of Lethiscus’ anatomy.

Changing position on the tetrapod ‘family tree’

When they included this new anatomical information into an analysis of its relationship to other animals, Lethiscus moved its position on the “family tree,” dropping into the earliest stages of the fin-to-limb transition. “It’s a very satisfying result, having them among other animals that lived at the same time,” says Anderson.

The results match better with the sequence of evolution implied by the geologic record. “Lethiscus also has broad impacts on evolutionary biology and people doing molecular clock reproductions of modern animals,” says Anderson. “They use fossils to calibrate the molecular clock.  By removing Lethiscus from the immediate ancestry of modern tetrapods, it changes the calibration date used in those analyses.”

Ancient fossil holds new insights into how fish evolved onto land

Wednesday, May 24, 2017

An excavation in Scotland shows that Roman soldiers used lead ammo with lethal accuracy.

On a fortified hill in Scotland some 1,900 years ago, a Roman army attacked local warriors by hurling lead bullets from slings that had nearly the stopping power of a modern .44 magnum handgun, according to recent experiments.



The assault seems to have been deadly effective, for the local warriors were armed only with swords and other simple weapons, says John Reid, a researcher at the Trimontium Trust and one of the co-directors of the archaeological fieldwork at Burnswark, south of Edinburgh. “We’re fairly sure that the natives on top of the hill weren’t allowed to survive.”

But Burnswark was just the opening salvo in a war against the restive tribes living north of Hadrian’s Wall. Despite their superior weaponry, Roman soldiers seem to have gotten bogged down in Scotland as they fought a tough, resourceful enemy capable of melting away into the hills and marshes. Less than two decades after the Romans attacked Burnswark and occupied part of Scotland’s lowlands, they retreated south to Hadrian’s Wall. “This is beginning to look like Rome’s Afghanistan,” Reid says.
 Reid and colleague Andrew Nicholson, an archaeologist at the Dumfries and Galloway Council, began studying Burnswark five years ago, hoping to uncover new clues to the events that unfolded at the site, which includes remains of two Roman camps. At the time, Scottish archaeologists were divided in their interpretations of the site. Some thought a Roman army had used Burnswark as an ancient firing range and training camp, while other researchers regarded the hill fort as the scene of a lengthy siege.

To clarify the picture, Reid and Nicholson decided to scour Burnswark for traces of ancient Roman ammunition. American archaeologists had used metal detectors successfully at the site of the Battle of Little Bighorn to locate buried bullets and shells and map the combatants’ movements across the battlefield. So Reid and Nicholson decided to try something similar at Burnswark. As a first step, the researchers learned to calibrate a metal detector so that it could distinguish the lead in an ancient Roman sling bullet from other metal artifacts buried at the site.

Trained metal detectorists then combed Burnswark’s hillsides and summit, producing more than 2,700 hits that Nicholson carefully recorded and mapped. Then the team ground-truthed the findings by digging five small trenches. The excavations revealed more than 400 Roman sling bullets right where the metal detectors indicated, as well as two spherical sandstone missiles known as ballista balls. The results suggested that 94 percent of the metal detector hits were in fact Roman bullets.
Impressed, the team began analysing the locations of the metal detector hits to better understand what had happened. They discovered a concentration of lead bullets across the entire 500-yard-long southern rampart of the Scottish hill fort, directly above one of the Roman camps. “This is just what we would expect from a besieging assault,” notes Reid. A second, smaller concentration lay to the north, along what may have been the defenders’ failed escape route.

The Roman slingers would have exacted a heavy toll. Recent experiments conducted in Germany showed that a 50-gram Roman bullet hurled by a trained slinger has only slightly less stopping power than a .44 magnum cartridge fired from a handgun. Other tests revealed that a trained slinger could hit a target smaller than a human being from 130 yards away. “That’s exactly the distance from the front rampart of the south [Roman] camp to the front rampart of the hill fort,” Reid noted.

TERROR TACTICS
The Romans also employed a previously unknown form of psychological warfare to terrify the Scots and undermine their resistance. While examining the bullets, Reid and Nicholson noticed small holes deliberately made in nearly 10 percent of the ammunition. Puzzled, the team cast replicas, and asked an experienced slinger to test them. The bullets with holes made “a weird banshee-like wail,” says Nicholson. “So you are getting these unworldly, unnatural sounds that you have never heard before, and people are falling over on either side of you.”

Comparative isotopic studies of bullets from Burnswark and from other well-dated sites suggests that the bloody assault took place around A.D.140, early in the reign of the Roman emperor Antoninus Pius. “He was a new emperor with a need for a military victory somewhere,” says Reid. By striking with exemplary violence at Burnswark, the emperor may have hoped to claim a quick success and subdue difficult tribes along its northern frontier.

Fraser Hunter, an archaeologist at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, calls the new research “really enterprising and exciting.” And he thinks that Burnswark now raises new questions about the problems that the Romans may have created for themselves when they built Hadrian’s wall and made new enemies among the Scottish tribes. “The Afghanistan parallel is interesting,” Hunter says, “because one of the problems that empires have in dealing with—if you like—warlord societies is that they often stumble in and cause problems that they don’t know they are causing.”

Source
http://www.nationalgeographic.com

Ancient Slingshot Was as Deadly as a .44 Magnum

Thursday, May 18, 2017

A massive ancient Ring Fort has been discovered on the outskirts of Newbridge, Scotland.

Cllr Mark Lynch (SF) asked council heritage officer, Brigid Loughlin for some more details about the ancient medieval settlement at yesterday’s (May 17) Kildare Newbridge Municipal District meeting.

“This is a very exciting archaeological find,” said Cllr Lynch (SF).

He asked if further study could be undertaken by experts at UCD at the Great Connell site, or if further explorations could be carried out.

Ms Loughlin said the site was set in farmland and in private ownership. She said it wasn’t the remit of the council to carry out further studies. She pointed out it was a huge fort, but could only be seen clearly from the air, as it is in grassland.

The site has been added to the record of monuments and places.

“Because of the sheer size of it and cost, it would cost millions to excavate the site. A geophysical survey is available and has been published by the Department,” she said.

She pointed out there may be an opportunity for local history groups or specialist journals to write articles on the find. She again stressed the land was in private ownership and was not easily accessible because of its location.

Kildare has a number of significant historical sites.

Source
http://www.leinsterleader.ie

Ancient Ring Fort discovered in Newbridge, Scotland

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