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Reference

Date 2001

Event ID 1144499

Category Documentary Reference

Type Reference

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1144499

NC 2493 2199 NC22SW 5

The medieval parish church of Assynt, which was founded before 1274 (1), stood in the burial-ground situated 170m E of the head of Loch Assynt. The present church, in the NW angle of the rectangular walled enclosure, is largely of 19th-century date, but the much-altered MacLeod of Assynt burial-aisle was probably attached to the N side of an earlier building in the 17th century. A rectangular earthwork which lies 30m SW of the burial-ground has been identified as a medieval homestead-moat (2), and the MacLeod castle of Ardvreck occupies a promontory 1.8km to the NNW.

Part of the head of a large free-standing cross, re-used as a marker at the head of a graveslab, was identified in 1993 during the present survey, along with a small fragment of another arm. They were subsequently removed for display in the Assynt Heritage Centre, Lochinver. The large fragment is of a grey-green metabasic rock, probably from the SW Highlands (3). It is damaged in places by flaking, and measures 0.89m in length by 0.54m across the end of the arm and 0.36m across the constriction. It tapers in thickness from 90mm at the centre of the cross-head to 75mm at the end of the arm. The outer part of the arm returns straight for 0.18m before curving into long shallow U-shaped armpits. The surface is plain but the edges of one face have neatly-formed bevels of 15mm to 20mm, and within these a margin varying from 40mm to 80mm in width is defined by incised grooves (4). These follow the curve of the armpits, and are intersected towards the centre by a shallower groove parallel to the end of the arm (5). The smaller fragment, 0.31m by 0.28m and 40mm thick, preserves one corner of the end of a cross-arm, broken obliquely, with a similar, but narrower, bevelled and incised margin. The surface is well-preserved, showing the use of an adze or axe and a claw-chisel.

The large fragment was presumably the top arm of the cross, since its margin is twice as wide as that of the other fragment, and the span is likely to have been at least 1.6m. The variation in width of the margin, 40mm in one armpit and 60mm in the other, is however an unexpected feature in such a carefully laid-out design. The scale of the armpits gives the cross some resemblance to that at Kilnave, but the lack of ornament makes dating difficult. There are no medieval parallels for a cross of this type in the West Highland area, and the slightly stilted form of the armpits may indicate the influence of the Anglo-Scandinavian 'hammer-head' type (6).

[additional note, Sept 2001: this stone has been awarded by the Treasure Trove panel to Inverness Museum]

Footnotes:

(1) I B Cowan 1967, 9; OPS 1854, 693.

(2) NMRS database NC22SW 6.

(3) The Commissioners are indebted to Mrs M Campbell, Loch Assynt, for communicating this identification by Dr J Mendum, British Geological Survey.

(4) At one angle of the outer arm, and also on the smaller fragment, the grooves are slightly prolonged beyond their intersections.

(5) In the accompanying reconstruction this forms a central square of the same width as the diameter of the armpits.

(6) Cf. Kilmory Knap (A7, 76(2)).

I Fisher 2001.

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