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Woodrae 1 Description of stone

Event ID 1036349

Category Descriptive Accounts

Type Early Medieval Carved Stones Project

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1036349

Woodwrae 1, Angus, Pictish cross-slab

Measurements: H 1.80m, W 0.78m>0.63m, D 0.13m

Stone type: sandstone

Place of discovery: NO 5185 5663

Present location: National Museums Scotland, Edinburgh (IB 202)

Evidence for discovery: found around 1819 in the floor of the kitchen ‘when the foundations of the old castle were cleared away’. The estate factor had it sent to his friend, Sir Walter Scott, at Abbotsford, where it stood in the garden until 1924, when it was given to the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland in Edinburgh. The defacement of the cross suggests that there may have been an intention, prior to its re-use as a kitchen paving slab, to re-use it as a graveslab with an inscription in place of the decoration. It has been suggested that the slab derived from the old burial ground at Aikenhatt, a little to the south-west of Woodwrae (Ritchie 1995, 8).

Present condition: the base of the slab is broken, the carving on the cross on face A has been carefully chipped away and face C is very damaged.

Description

The slab tapers towards the top, where there is a tenon, 0.30m long and 0.03m high (no attempt was made to correct the slope of the top). Both faces A and C are carved in relief, but the narrow faces are plain.

Face A has an elaborately ornamented frame, filled with interlace patterns down the sides and spirals along the top. The top of the frame extends in a central band to meet the top arm of the cross. Below the side-arms the voids in the interlace form crosses, and above the arms the interlace pattern is arranged so as to form crosses. The main cross is equal-armed with cusped arms and open rounded armpits, which is borne on a shaft filled with interlace, key pattern and spirals. The side-arms of the cross extend into the ornamental frame of the slab, giving an illusion of perspective. The careful defacement of the cross may suggest that it bore a depiction of Christ crucified (Henderson 1993, 213). The background is entirely filled with monster imagery. To the left of the top arm is an entwined pair of goggle-eyed serpents, while to the right there is a beast from whose jaws protrude a pair of human legs and whose tail ends in a goggle-eyed serpent’s head. Flanking the lower arm and shaft are on the left, two animals grasping each other’s hind leg in their jaws, and below them an animal with its head in the mouth of another animal. On the right is first an animal standing with its head turned to look outwards, and below another animal with a smaller creature hanging from its jaws. The head survives of another animal below the last. All the intact animals have bird’s feet.

Within a plain flat-band border on face C are, at the top a horserider moving towards the left and behind him a double disc symbol and a step symbol. The discs have two concentric inner incised lines, and there is an oval within the surviving part of the step symbol. Rider and symbols are separated from the images below by a stepped roll moulding. Two horsemen and a hound are moving from right to left below the separating moulding, and the rest of face C is obliterated by wear and flaking, except for one area on the lower left. Here a bull is depicted above a lizard-like creature perched on the back of an animal with a very large ear: the lizard is biting its neck. Allen adds that ‘the tail of the reptile is interlaced with the two hind legs of the beast’, although this is not shown on the drawing in ECMS and no longer survives.

Date range: eighth or ninth century.

Primary references: Jervise 1857, 194; ECMS pt 3, 242-5; Henderson 1993; Ritchie 1995; Fraser 2008, no 73.

Desk-based information compiled by A Ritchie 2018.

People and Organisations

References