Pricing Change
New pricing for orders of material from this site will come into place shortly. Charges for supply of digital images, digitisation on demand, prints and licensing will be altered.
Forteviot Churchyard, Cross-slab
Cross Slab (Early Medieval)
Site Name Forteviot Churchyard, Cross-slab
Classification Cross Slab (Early Medieval)
Alternative Name(s) Forteviot No.1
Canmore ID 26538
Site Number NO01NE 10.01
NGR NO 0514 1747
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/26538
- Council Perth And Kinross
- Parish Forteviot
- Former Region Tayside
- Former District Perth And Kinross
- Former County Perthshire
Forteviot 1, Perthshire, cross-slab fragment
Measurements: H 0.61m, W 0.46m, D 0.18m
Stone type: sandstone
Place of discovery: NO 0514 1747
Present location: at Forteviot parish church.
Evidence for discovery: recorded standing upright in the churchyard in the mid nineteenth century by Stuart.
Present condition: broken but carving well preserved.
Description
This is the basal portion of a cross-slab or possibly cross-shaft carved in low relief on all four faces above a well-shaped and smoothed tenon. Face A is bordered by a roll moulding, within which a dense pattern of interlace resolves itself into four elements: an interlinked border and inner panel beneath the base of a cross-shaft itself consisting of an outer border and inner panel. Face B has a flat-band border down each side, within which is a frontal human head and torso, apparently naked, with shoulder-length hair. Springing from the top of the head is a pair of horns which become two of the three plaited tails of creatures above, now missing. Face C has flat-band borders down both sides which are the elongated bodies of animals, which at the foot of the panel have hind-quarters with ball and claw feet touching one another. Their tails curve up between their legs, in the case of the right-hand animal extending upwards to finish with an eared and goggle-eyed head with a long snout. It bites the horn of a quadruped on the left, while the latter holds its neck of the goggle-eyed creature between its jaws. The quadruped appears to be a wolf with body scrolls and dew claws, but its hind legs end in cloven hooves, its front legs in ball and claw feet, and a large curving horn springs from its head. Face D is bordered by a flat-band moulding, within which there is a basal panel of triangular interlace, the voids of which form a cross, with two cords extending upwards into looped interlace in which again the voids form crosses.
This stone is thought to be the base of the same cross-shaft as no 4.
Date range: ninth century.
Primary references: Stuart 1856, pl 119; ECMS pt 3, 323-5; Aitchison 2006, 104-9; Hall 2011, 140-1.
Desk-based information compiled by A Ritchie 2018
Forteviot 7, Perthshire, stone basin
Measurements: H
Stone type: sandstone
Place of discovery: NO 0514 1747
Present location: at Forteviot parish church.
Evidence for discovery:
Present condition: fractured but complete.
Description
This is an irregularly shaped natural boulder, into which a hemispherical hollow has been cut, about 0.24m in diameter and 0.14m deep.
Date range: early medieval or later.
Primary references: Aitchison 2006, 131-2.
Desk-based information compiled by A Ritchie 2018