887081 |
DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNTS |
PUBLICATION ACCOUNT |
Two stone circles formerly stood in the field on the crest of the hill a little over 200m north-north-east of Ley, each apparently comprising six orthostats erected along the line of a stony ring-bank. Save a single stone of the northern circle left as a rubbing stone (Cramond 1884, 92–3), most of the orthostats were blown up to provide materials to build the farmhouse and steading (Stuart 1867, 74–5; Name Book, Aberdeenshire, No. 12, p 56), and even this stone has now been removed. The date the circles were demolished is not altogether certain, but about 1838 or shortly after, both were trenched to improve the ground and remove the smaller stones that still remained. This led to the discovery of the well-known Gaulcross hoard of Pictish silver close to the single orthostat that had been left standing on the northern circle. The circles were first noted by Thomas Pennant, who refers to them as ‘the two circles of long stones called Gael–cross’ (1774, 140), but the most complete description is provided by John Stuart almost a hundred years later. He had his information from the tenant of the farm, James Lawtie, whose father had taken the lease in 1837 and soon after had begun improving the ground. While Lawtie remembered these improvements himself, the majority of the orthostats had probably been removed by then, for he could only relay to Stuart what an old man had told him about them. Thus, most of this description is at second or third hand. Nevertheless, the un-named old man recalled: ‘The one was about forty yards [36.5m] and the other about thirty-five yards [32m] in diameter, and … there were six pillars in each circle. These pillars were placed in a circular foundation of small boulders about thirty foot [9m] broad and two [0.6m] deep’. Lawtie continued: ‘Only one now remains of all the pillars. It marks the site of the circle that stood to the north. In the course of trenching the area of this circle about twenty years ago, the workmen found the silver chain and pin… between two stones… at a spot not far from the pillar (which still remains) on the south side of the circle … under and towards the centre of the circular belt of small stones in which the large pillars stood. On the opposite side of the circle was a large flat slab of limestone about seven feet long and three in breadth…[and] below it there was a thin layer of darkish greasy earth, which rested upon the common soil’ (Stuart 1867, 74–5). Apart from the hoard of Pictish silver, nothing else was found and it is clear that Lawtie’s expectations of burning and burials, and perhaps some kind of entrance, were disappointed. Lawtie also appears first in the list of three authorities consulted by OS surveyors for the terse description that appears in the Name Book (Banffshire, No. 12, p 56). He presumably pointed out the sites of the two rings, though Rev William Cramond, guiding a party of the Banffshire Field Club in September 1884, claimed that the outlines of both were still visible, lying about 45m apart. The additional details that Cramond supplies are therefore probably born of his own observations and those of Lawtie, who was still in the farm at that time (Cramond 1884, 93): the southern had ‘an outer ring of smaller stones, covering the ground irregularly in large quantities to a breadth of some 16 feet [5m]. Six large blocks of stone marked the circle proper, the diameter of which was about 60 feet [18m]’ (ibid 92). Of the northern circle he was less forthcoming, other than it was similar, but he located the surviving stone on the west of the circle, and the discovery of the Pictish hoard 5.5m south-east of it. The stone had fallen by the date of Coles’ visit, but he measured and sketched it where it lay, recording that it was 1.8m long by 1m broad and up to 0.6m thick (1906a, 187–9). It remained there until at least 1967 when Keith Blood of the OS visited the site. Both these circles seem to have been unusual monuments. We should not perhaps place too much weight on the count of six stones in each, but it is otherwise clear that the ring-banks formed substantial bands of cairn material and, designated an ‘outer ring’ by Cramond, that they extended well outside the orthostats. The absence of any entrances through the ring-banks is possibly also telling, for were these merely the stumps of large robbed cairns there would usually have been a gap broken through the perimeter to allow the passage of carts in and out of the central quarry. Parallels for rings of orthostats set in ring-banks can be found amongst the recumbent stone circles, such as at North Strone, but the absence of any detailed description of the orthostats and no mention of anything that might have been a recumbent setting on the southern arc precludes such an identification for either of the rings here. This was certainly Barnatt’s view of Gaulcross North (1989, 461, no. 6:130), but Ruggles included it in his supplementary list of recumbent stone circles (1999, 188), perhaps as a result of misunderstanding the report submitted in 1961 by William Johnston, an OS field investigator, who unfortunately described the last surviving orthostat as a recumbent stone. In the case of Gaulcross South, however, where Cramond produced a more convincing assessment of its diameter, Barnatt has suggested that this was more consistent with that of a recumbent stone circle than the six-stone ring postulated by Burl (1976a, 355, Ban 3; 2000, 424, Ban 3; Barnatt 1989, 284–5, no. 6:44). Unfortunately Burl has mistakenly associated the discovery of the Pictish silver hoard with Gaulcross South in the latest recension of his list. |
2011 |
887082 |
DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNTS |
PUBLICATION ACCOUNT |
Two stone circles formerly stood in the field on the crest of the hill a little over 200m north-north-east of Ley, each apparently comprising six orthostats erected along the line of a stony ring-bank. Save a single stone of the northern circle left as a rubbing stone (Cramond 1884, 92–3), most of the orthostats were blown up to provide materials to build the farmhouse and steading (Stuart 1867, 74–5; Name Book, Aberdeenshire, No. 12, p 56), and even this stone has now been removed. The date the circles were demolished is not altogether certain, but about 1838 or shortly after, both were trenched to improve the ground and remove the smaller stones that still remained. This led to the discovery of the well-known Gaulcross hoard of Pictish silver close to the single orthostat that had been left standing on the northern circle. The circles were first noted by Thomas Pennant, who refers to them as ‘the two circles of long stones called Gael–cross’ (1774, 140), but the most complete description is provided by John Stuart almost a hundred years later. He had his information from the tenant of the farm, James Lawtie, whose father had taken the lease in 1837 and soon after had begun improving the ground. While Lawtie remembered these improvements himself, the majority of the orthostats had probably been removed by then, for he could only relay to Stuart what an old man had told him about them. Thus, most of this description is at second or third hand. Nevertheless, the un-named old man recalled: ‘The one was about forty yards [36.5m] and the other about thirty-five yards [32m] in diameter, and … there were six pillars in each circle. These pillars were placed in a circular foundation of small boulders about thirty foot [9m] broad and two [0.6m] deep’. Lawtie continued: ‘Only one now remains of all the pillars. It marks the site of the circle that stood to the north. In the course of trenching the area of this circle about twenty years ago, the workmen found the silver chain and pin… between two stones… at a spot not far from the pillar (which still remains) on the south side of the circle … under and towards the centre of the circular belt of small stones in which the large pillars stood. On the opposite side of the circle was a large flat slab of limestone about seven feet long and three in breadth…[and] below it there was a thin layer of darkish greasy earth, which rested upon the common soil’ (Stuart 1867, 74–5). Apart from the hoard of Pictish silver, nothing else was found and it is clear that Lawtie’s expectations of burning and burials, and perhaps some kind of entrance, were disappointed. Lawtie also appears first in the list of three authorities consulted by OS surveyors for the terse description that appears in the Name Book (Banffshire, No. 12, p 56). He presumably pointed out the sites of the two rings, though Rev William Cramond, guiding a party of the Banffshire Field Club in September 1884, claimed that the outlines of both were still visible, lying about 45m apart. The additional details that Cramond supplies are therefore probably born of his own observations and those of Lawtie, who was still in the farm at that time (Cramond 1884, 93): the southern had ‘an outer ring of smaller stones, covering the ground irregularly in large quantities to a breadth of some 16 feet [5m]. Six large blocks of stone marked the circle proper, the diameter of which was about 60 feet [18m]’ (ibid 92). Of the northern circle he was less forthcoming, other than it was similar, but he located the surviving stone on the west of the circle, and the discovery of the Pictish hoard 5.5m south-east of it. The stone had fallen by the date of Coles’ visit, but he measured and sketched it where it lay, recording that it was 1.8m long by 1m broad and up to 0.6m thick (1906a, 187–9). It remained there until at least 1967 when Keith Blood of the OS visited the site. Both these circles seem to have been unusual monuments. We should not perhaps place too much weight on the count of six stones in each, but it is otherwise clear that the ring-banks formed substantial bands of cairn material and, designated an ‘outer ring’ by Cramond, that they extended well outside the orthostats. The absence of any entrances through the ring-banks is possibly also telling, for were these merely the stumps of large robbed cairns there would usually have been a gap broken through the perimeter to allow the passage of carts in and out of the central quarry. Parallels for rings of orthostats set in ring-banks can be found amongst the recumbent stone circles, such as at North Strone, but the absence of any detailed description of the orthostats and no mention of anything that might have been a recumbent setting on the southern arc precludes such an identification for either of the rings here. This was certainly Barnatt’s view of Gaulcross North (1989, 461, no. 6:130), but Ruggles included it in his supplementary list of recumbent stone circles (1999, 188), perhaps as a result of misunderstanding the report submitted in 1961 by William Johnston, an OS field investigator, who unfortunately described the last surviving orthostat as a recumbent stone. In the case of Gaulcross South, however, where Cramond produced a more convincing assessment of its diameter, Barnatt has suggested that this was more consistent with that of a recumbent stone circle than the six-stone ring postulated by Burl (1976a, 355, Ban 3; 2000, 424, Ban 3; Barnatt 1989, 284–5, no. 6:44). Unfortunately Burl has mistakenly associated the discovery of the Pictish silver hoard with Gaulcross South in the latest recension of his list. |
2011 |
887135 |
DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNTS |
PUBLICATION ACCOUNT |
Two boulders lying in a field on an east-facing slope 450m north-west of Feith Hill are all that remain of this stone circle. The larger is a prone slab measuring 1.75m in length by 1.5m in breadth, and its smaller neighbour on the west measures about 1.45m in length by 0.6m in breadth and 0.5m in thickness. When first recorded by the OS surveyors, about 1866, the larger slab was still upright and was identified as the Hare Stone; the smaller is only mentioned in the Name Book as an inserted note (Banffshire, No. 19, p 54). Nevertheless, both appear on the 25-inch map, marked with dots 5m to 7m apart. However, by the time Coles paid a visit in 1902 the smaller lay no more than 1.35m to the west (1903a, 116–17, fig 28). Since then, this stone has been moved still further, Richard Little of the OS reporting it upright in 1967 and the present survey finding it steeply canted over. The cupmarks Coles noted on its upper surface, which were subsequently described by James Ritchie (1918, 108), are now on its underside, six of them adjacent to a raised mineral vein. Despite its small size, Coles believed that the Hare Stone was a recumbent, which his plan shows aligned roughly east and west, and on the understanding that the smaller stone had stood close by he identified it as the fallen west flanker. The farmer, John Morrison, who was probably the J Morrison cited by the OS surveyors in the Name Book almost 40 years earlier, told him that the circle had been about 18m in diameter and its interior was very stony, though there is now no evidence of any concentration of stones in the ploughsoil round about. He also told Coles that several cists had been found within the interior. The Hare Stanes appear in most lists as a probable recumbent stone circle (Burl 1970, 60, 79; 1976a, 355, Ban 4; 2000, 424, Ban 4; Barnatt 1989, 286, no. 6:49; Ruggles 1984, 59; 1999, 185, no. 18), but the present survey has been more circumspect in its assessment. The present configuration of the two stones is misleading and it is clear from the first recorded position of the smaller stone that it is unlikely to be a fallen flanker. Furthermore, the overall shape of the larger slab, and its rough upper surface, formerly its south face, do not make for a particularly convincing recumbent – even if the stone has been cut down and partly results from relatively recent stone breaking. It would be churlish, however, to deny that this is the site of a stone circle enclosing a cairn, finding at least one parallel close by at the Greymuir Cairn (NJ64NE 9). |
2011 |