It's my every second Saturday post at the Writing Wranglers and Warriors Blog today.
Since I'm writing about my visit to Dunadd Fort earlier this week, I'm REBLOGGING the information that I wrote here. Photographs may differ!
"In the footsteps of Kings
Early this week, I enjoyed a fabulous tour of a large swathe
of Scotland on my way to
attend a wedding on the west coast of Scotland . To get to my hotel at
Lochgilphead, I had to drive about 240 miles across Scotland through some fabulous
countryside. There is no direct route there because the Grampian
Mountains get in the way! Because of the distance involved going
to the wedding meant a 3 day trip. (Black dot to the right my home in Aberdeenshire; black dot to bottom left Lochgilphead; red dot Crear Wedding Venue on the coast of the Argyll Peninsula)
Of course it was just too tempting to not look into what I
could do regarding sightseeing on the trip. I’ve been to the Argyll and Kintyre
peninsula before but not specifically to see any ancient heritage sights. A
little bit of research and I was happy dancing.
Dunadd Fort near Lochgilphead |
Dunadd! One of the
most important sites in Scottish and northern Irish history.
Dunadd Fort was the ancient stronghold of the kings of Dal
Riata from approximately AD 500 to AD 800, though the site has been used since
the Iron Ages. Dunadd, meaning fort on the River Add, was only about 4 miles
from my hotel. At about 175 feet high, there was a short climb involved but it
was possible to squeeze in a quick jaunt between an early breakfast and a pick
up at 1 p.m by the coach taking my husband and I to the wedding at Crear on the
west coast of the Argyll
Peninsula .
The pathway is well signposted |
The rocky outcrop of Dunadd Fort rises from the flat valley
which is now partially reclaimed farmland but otherwise bogland of - the Moine Mhor – meaning the ‘Great Moss’.
It sits near the River Add and it’s possible that at one time it may have been
an island. Dunadd was the royal centre of the kingdom of Dal Riata (also
written as Dalriada), Dal Riata in Gaelic meaning Reiti’s Share or Reiti’s
Tribe.
We learn from medieval text entries for AD 683 in The Annals of Ulster that the kings from
Ireland , known as the ‘Scotti’ came to Dunadd and colonised
the area- not a long sail since there are only around 11 miles between northern Ireland and the coast of Argyll . (NB the entries were recorded in The Annals of Ulster much later than AD
683 and are thought to have been copied from earlier original annals) The Scotti
people were Gaels. They became the Kings of the Scots, gave the name to Scotland and
gave it its Gaelic culture. The kingdom
of Dal Riata stretched northwards to
Ardnamurchan, south to the island of Arran and the Mull of Kintyre and westwards to Northern Ireland .
The kings who lived at Dunadd were well-connected and had good contact with
important individuals and peoples around Europe .
The nearby sea, ships and sailors played a key role.
Remnants of the ramparts |
When at its most popular, Dunadd Fort was surrounded by
stone ramparts, possibly as many as four lines of fortifications. Entry to the fort was via a natural cleft in
the rock. There would have been wooden gates controlling access and inside the
walls there were a number of houses and workshops.
A failed selfie in high wind |
Dunadd was an important trade centre, iron and gold being
smelted on site. The ‘raw’ gold probably came from Ireland and the product was fashioned
into impressive elaborate jewellery. The smelted iron was formed into weapons. Wine
and herbs were brought in from southern Europe .
Traces of rare minerals from the far east have been found which were used to
make dyes for scribes to use in colouring ecclesiastical manuscripts- on nearby
Iona and other monasteries.
The 'citadel' / king's mead house was above here |
Climbing a little higher than the workshops level there was
another set of ramparts below the summit where it’s thought an important stone ‘citadel’
was built on the flattened peak. This was the great hall, or mead house, of the
king where important business was conducted and where feasting was likely in
good times.
The inauguration stone |
Just below the summit on a natural outcrop lies the
inauguration stone of the kings of Dal Riata. The footprint carved deep into
the rock is an impressive sign of Scottish kingship. During the coronation
ceremony, when the new king placed his foot into the imprint he was not only
pledging to do his utmost for his people of Dal Riata but was also pledging to
be the ‘keeper of the land’ itself.
Wow! My right foot hovering but guess what? It really does fit and it's only a size 5. |
Kings of Dal Riata from King Aedan mac
Gabrain AD 574 - 608 ( probably the first Christian king) to Kenneth MacAlpin AD
834 - 859 were invested at Dunadd. Keneth MacAlpin is credited with the honour
and achievement of uniting the kingdoms of both the Scots and the Picts at time
of great pressure from maurauding Vikings.
King Aedan mac Gabrain would have been a familiar figure to
St. Columba and his monks on the island
of Iona which isn’t so
far away. By the time of Aedan’s
accession, his inauguration ceremony would have been part pagan (his being
married to the land) and part Christian (when he would have been blessed by the
Abbot of Iona).
In Gaelic folklore it was the hero, Ossian, who leapt to
Dunadd from Rhudle Hill one kilometre away. His foot gouged out the footprint,
his knee on landing carved out the basin and his outstretched fingerprints
possibly made the ogham script that is carved alongside on the stone.
The Well |
Nancy Jardine |
Dunadd lost its importance after the unification of the
Scots and the Picts when the site of the kings moved to Scone ,
in Perthshire.
I’m extremely glad that I made the effort to spend the
couple of hours at Dunadd and I didn’t have to rush too much to get changed
into my glad rags for the wedding!
Slainthe!
I really enjoyed reading about your visit to Dunadd. I went there last July and now it is one of my favourite places in the world.
ReplyDeleteAnne