Iona, general. Plan showing outline, incised, ringed crosses.
SC 370885
Description Iona, general. Plan showing outline, incised, ringed crosses.
Catalogue Number SC 370885
Category On-line Digital Images
Copy of AGD 527/64
Scope and Content Ring-headed incised cross from Iona, Argyll and Bute Iona is one of the most important religious sites in Scotland. The earliest community was formed by St Columba who came over from Ireland around AD 563. This was replaced by the Benedictine Abbey and Augustinian Nunnery in around AD 1200. This slab was used as a paving slab outside 'St Columba's Shrine'. It bears a ringed cross with rounded sunken angles and a decorated base. The inscription, OR(OIT) DO L[OI(N)]GS[E}CAN, means 'A prayer for Loingsechan'. It is now in the Nunnery Museum. A number of early Christian cross-incised stones have been found on Iona. They were probably grave-markers, or possibly boundary-markers, with those decorated on both sides standing upright, and the rest being recumbent. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
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File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution: © RCAHMS
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