Another Pictish cross-of-arcs: an old find from Shetland re-interpreted

Anna Ritchie (Author)


Keyword(s):
Cross slab, Carved stone
Location(s):
Jarlshof; Dunrossness; Shetland; Scotland; UK
Period(s):
Early medieval

Abstract


A fragment of carved stone known as ‘Lerwick’ (NMS X.IB.19) is argued to have come, most probably, from the Pictish levels at Jarlshof, Dunrossness, Shetland, sometime before June 1861. The stone bears part of a Pictish crescent symbol on one side and part of a cross-of-arcs embellished with decorated lentoid forms on the other. The symbol-bearing cross-slab from which the fragment comes probably dates to the 7th century and may have stood in or near a churchyard at Jarlshof. It is compared with the cross-slabs from Papil and Bressay and with fragments of similar Shetland stones, and its place in the development of the cross-of-arcs is discussed.

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Published
21-11-2018
How to Cite
Ritchie, A. (2018). Another Pictish cross-of-arcs: an old find from Shetland re-interpreted. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, 147, 119-126. https://doi.org/10.9750/PSAS.147.1238
Section
Articles

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