Pictish Stones Scotland Photography. Aberlemno Pictish Stones. Three carved Pictish stones line the roadside of this small village. One more stone is in the churchyard; carved with a Celtic cross and animal decorations, with a Battle scene on the reverse.
Pictish Sculpture and Metalwork in Early Medieval Scotland. The sculpture and metalwork of the Picts of Scotland form one of the great enigmas of early medieval art. Marginalized and dismissed for many years by art historians as inchoate and provincial, the large surviving Pictish corpus of cross-slabs, incised stones, and metalwork remained until recently the territory of archaeologists and those bewitched by the mysterious, unfathomable symbols found in so much of the art. Now, drawing upon art historical research and a lifetime of experience, George and Isabel Henderson show how the art of the Picts interacted with the currents of "Insular" art, and was produced by a sophisticated society capable of sustaining large-scale art programs. A masterpiece of scholarship and deduction, the book is illustrated with some three hundred photographs and newly commissioned line drawings and maps. Throughout, the authors give strong consideration to the formal qualities and the iconography of the works, illuminating some of the more intractable problems associated with the Picts, not least the meaning of the supposedly "pagan" symbols.
With its acute analysis of Insular art and questioning of the function and meaning of Pictish art, this book will be of interest to art historians, archaeologists, and medievalists of all disciplines, and is arguably the most important publication on this subject in over a century. The Art of the Picts: Sculpture and Metalwork in Early Medieval Scotland.
Roseweir Ancestry, Glasgow, Scotland
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This afternoon, I am posting information on Roseweir family history as
sourced from a memorial at Eastwood New Cemetery. This records the death of:
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23 hours ago
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