General view of Pictish cross-slab carving re-used as stair lintel at Lethendy Tower.
PT 2384
Description General view of Pictish cross-slab carving re-used as stair lintel at Lethendy Tower.
Date 1969
Collection Records of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS), Edinbu
Catalogue Number PT 2384
Category Photographs and Off-line Digital Images
Copies SC 449889, G 83800 S, SC 2639002
Scope and Content Detail of Pictish cross-slab reused as stair lintel, Lethendy Tower, Perthshire This is a detail of a 10th-century Pictish cross-slab which has been reused as a stair lintel. It is approximately 0.31m square and carved from greyish stone. It depicts two musicians facing each other, a dog and an unidentified rectangular object. Both musicians wear tunics with waistbands and the one on the left appears to have a hemmed sleeve which ends at the elbow. He is playing a harp with seven strings and a soundbox, and the other plays a triple pipe similar to the 'launeddas' of Sardinia. The figures represent David and his musicians. The Picts used Biblical imagery on many of their cross-slabs and David is widely represented in Pictish sculptures. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
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