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Workshop: Researching Local History with Old Maps [Bonar Bridge] ...

26 June 2014


Starts: 19:00
Ends: 21:30

 Researching Local History with Old Maps

Bonar Bridge Community Hall

Scotland has an enviable history of maps available for finding out about the past. This workshop will explore old maps, both before and after Telford’s activities in the area, primarily using maps available on the Internet. No experience needed. All welcome. Transport available if needed.

Part of ARCH's Telford in the Kyle of Sutherland project. For further information contact the ARCH office on 01349 868230 {leave message) or info@archhighland.org.uk

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Talk: Dying a Pict: barrows, carved stones and the landscape [Fortrose] ...

26 June 2014


Starts: 19:30

 Dying a Pict: barrows, carved stones and the landscape

Talk by Dr Adrián Maldonaldo, Lecturer in Archaeology, University of Chester

NOTE CHANGE OF VENUE: NOW SEAFORTH LODGE, STATION ROAD, FORTROSE

GROAM House Museum Annual Academic Lecture. Admission to all lectures £4 (Members/Students £2).

Our speaker, Dr Adrián Maldonado, is an archaeologist with a particular interest in the early medieval period and is very pleased to have the opportunity to come and speak to us.

 

Adrián studied Medieval History at Harvard before going on to do a Masters in Archaeology at the University of Glasgow where his PhD in 2011 was on Christianity and Burial in Late Iron Age Scotland. Since then he has been expanding his research to include all aspects of early Christianity in Britain.

 

The following is a preview of Adrián's lecture:

The distinctive square barrows and carved stones of northeastern Scotland have long been seen as expressions of Pictish ethnic and religious beliefs. However, it has become clear that not all of the dead were commemorated in barrow cemeteries, and that very few excavated burial sites have direct associations with Pictish stones. Barrows and symbol stones both seem to be connected with places of pre-existing sacred power and assembly, but their distribution is almost mutually exclusive. Furthermore, recent excavations show that the use of ‘Pictish’ barrows stretches across the first millennium AD and these barrow landscapes could be surprisingly long-lived. The question of whether the dead under barrows were Picts, kings or pagans is perhaps the wrong way to look at these sites – instead, this approach shifts attention to the ways in which memory, myth and ritual are performed in and through the landscape. Rather than straightforward expressions of a ‘Pictish’ identity, barrows and carved stones reveal the ways in which this notion was created, used and subsequently forgotten across the first millennium AD.

Adrián's lecture to us promises to be a fascinating insight into this aspect of the Picts and, if the last two GHM lectures are anything to go by, you'll have to arrive in good time to be sure of a seat! For those of you who will be coming to this venue for the first time, there is good parking straight across from the Lodge. As usual admission will be £4 or, for members and students, £2. Tea and coffee will be available after the talk.

 

 

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Workshop: 'Strike a pose': Archaeological photography for beginners ...

26 June 2014


Starts: 14:00
Ends: 17:00

 'Strike a pose': Archaeological photography for Beginners.

Free workshop at Tarbat Discovery Centre, Portmahomack
To book a place contact info@tarbat-discovery.co.uk or 01862 871351.

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Archaeology for Communities in the Highlands (ARCH), The Goods Shed, The Old Station, Strathpeffer, Ross-Shire, Scotland IV14 9DH
Tel: +44 (0)77888 35466 Email: