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Description of stone

Event ID 1008407

Category Descriptive Accounts

Type Early Medieval Carved Stones Project

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1008407

Latheron 1, Caithness, Pictish symbol stone inscribed in ogham

Measurements: H 0.91m, W 0.43m, D 0.10m

Stone type: grey sandstone

Place of discovery: ND 1981 3315

Present location: National Museums Scotland, Edinburgh (IB 183)

Evidence for discovery: found by John Nicholson in 1903 in the interior face of the wall of an old byre, taken to Keiss Castle and presented to the museum in 1905.

Present condition: broken

Description

The carved face appears to have been bordered by a deeply pecked line, which survives along the left-hand edge, where just within it is a long inscription in ogham. Forsyth’s reading of the ogham is DUNNODNNA(I)T or Dunodnait. At the top the lower part of a cross carved in relief shows double-spiral ornament within the shaft and very simple two-cord interlace in the basal tenon. Below are incised a stylised eagle standing on a salmon, above an incomplete motif of two horsemen.

Date: eighth or ninth century.

Desk-based information compiled by A Ritchie 2016

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References