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Eastern Influence on Carvings at St. Andrews and Nigg, Scotland*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

Amongst the early Christian monuments of the British Isles the Scottish cross-slabs form a well defined group. They are related to the Irish and Manx crosses of the 7th and 8th centuries and show occasionally some connexion with Northumbrian art. But, out of motives borrowed from these different sources, there was evolved in Scotland a type of monument peculiar to that country. The erect slab was constantly preferred to the free-standing cross, and, although a flat style of carving, similar to the Irish style, was used, and many of the Irish motives—spirals, interlacing and occasionally animal-interlacing—were adopted, the spirited rendering of hunting scenes and fantastic animals, and the use of the cross, framed in the slab as in a page of manuscript, gave to these monuments a definite originality.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1936

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Footnotes

*

I am greatly indebted to Mlle. Henry for the help she has given me in writing this paper.

References

Throughout this paper the word Scottish is used with its modern meaning and not in the early medieval sense.

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* I wish to thank Dr Kitzinger for calling my attention to this carving, which in his opinion can be dated at about A.D. 800. For a description and illustrations of the cross see Collingwood, Northumbrian Crosses of the pre-Norman Age’, 76 and Archaeologia Aeliana 1925, ser. 4, 1, 159.Google Scholar

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23 Romilly Allen, p. 82. Two examples of incised interlacing occur in England. One is at Ilkley, in Yorkshire ; the other at Irton, in Cumberland.

24 For a more detailed account of the chronology and classification of the Scottish slabs, see an article to appear shortly in the Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.

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34 The road from Iona to Nigg would be an easy one, following the present route of the Caledonian canal.

35 Romilly Allen, 381, 384, 385, 389, 391.