Clach a' Charridh
The Clach a' Charridh or Shandwick Stone is a Class II Pictish stone located near Shandwick on the Tarbat peninsula in Easter Ross, Scotland. It is a scheduled monument.[1] Since 1988 it has been encased in a glass cover room.
Carving
It is a Class II stone, with a jewelled cross studded with 54 raised spiral bosses on the top half of one side and various Pictish symbols on the reverse.[2]
On the face beneath the arms of the cross there are four-winged cherubim in frames either side of the cross-shaft. Beneath these are indeterminate beasts above interlaced serpent-like creatures. At the bottom, beneath the cross are two double-discs each composed of two pairs of serpents whose upper bodies form the rim of a disc with their lower bodies interlaced together in the centre of the other disc of the pair.
The reverse contains four full-width panels above a 2 x 2 arrangement of panels at the bottom (but the bottom 2 half-width panels are now hidden). The top panel shows a Pictish double-disc with (mostly) triple-spiral decoration. The second panel shows a large Pictish Beast with three small animals: two horned sheep and another quadruped with a long tail. The third panel is usually referred to as a hunting scene. It shows a large assortment of men and animals with three of the men mounted on horses hunting a stag; two men on foot fighting each other with swords while holding shields; and a man with a peaked cap firing a bow at a stag. The fourth panel contains 48 triple-spirals in concentric circles around 4 double-spirals at the centre. The outer spirals are very similar to those on the bottom panel on the reverse of the Hilton of Cadboll stone, which has been identified as representing the four rivers of paradise. The bottom 2 x 2 panels contain circular knotwork and interlace.
History and orientation
The earliest published record of the stone is in Rev Charles Cordiner's Antiquities and Scenery of the North of Scotland, in a series of Letters to Thomas Pennant, London, 1780 where the reverse side is illustrated. The next published record is a paper by Charles Petley (1780 - 1830) written c.1811-2, delivered posthumously to the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland in 1831 and published in 1857.[3] This illustrates both faces of the stone, with the cross-face referred to as "west" and the reverse as "east" (see the accompanying plate showing the reverse). The paper includes these statements:
The length of the cross on the west side in 5 feet 7 inches. It is supposed that the workmanship of this is much more modern than that of the east side...
The stone fell in a storm in 1846[4] and was re-erected. Today the cross faces east towards the sea and the Pictish symbols face west over the land.
The Gaelic name (Clach a’ Charaidh) means ‘stone of the grave-plots’. A burial ground here was recorded in 1889 as last used during the cholera epidemic of 1832 and ploughed under about 1885.[5]
References
- ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Clach a' Charridh,cross slab (Shandwick Stone) (SM1674)". Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- ^ "The Shandwick Stone". Highland Council: Historic Environment Record. Archived from the original on 16 May 2013. Retrieved 18 October 2009.
- ^ Petley, Charles (1831). "A Short Account of some Carved Stones in Ross-shire, accompanied with a series of Outline Engravings" (PDF). Archaeologia Scotica. 4: 345–352 – via Archaeology Data Services.
- ^ Allen, J.Romilly (1903). The early Christian Monuments of Scotland. Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. pp. 68 Part III.
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: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ "The Pictish Trail". Highland Council: Historic Environment Record. Archived from the original on 14 August 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2009.
- Scott, Douglas, The Stones of the Pictish Peninsulas, (Hilton Trust, 2004)
External links
57°44′51″N 3°55′29″W / 57.74750°N 3.92472°W