In cave-dwellings and
in tombs there have been found throughout Scotland arrow-heads,
spear-heads, and axes made of flint, the weapons of the men of the
Stone Age. The Bronze Age followed but did not at once supersede the
Stone Age. When the Iron Age came, the Caledonians would have
abundance of material within their own land for their uses, though
the puzzle is how they could produce the intense heat necessary for
smelting iron ore. As in the case of the earlier periods, it must
not be assumed that bronze or even stone weapons at once became
obsolete on the discovery of iron. Various places in Angus have
yielded swords, daggers, spear-heads, besides implements and
personal ornaments.
In the conflicts
between the Romans and the Caledonians, the invaders seem to have
employed two routes through the county. The main route ran along the
middle of Strathmore ; the other, which would secure communication
with the sea, began on the Firth of Tay and skirting the eastern
heights of the Sidlaws joined the central road some distance from
the point at which it entered the Mearns. There are remains of the
former road, now nearly obliterated, in the parish of Airlie, and
there was a camp at the junction of the Dean and the Isla. Another
situated about a half-mile north-east of Forfar, was capable,
according to the estimate of experts, of containing 26,000 men. In
the parish of Oathlaw, at Battle Dykes, are the remains of another
camp, stated to be three times as large as the famous camp at Ardoch.
Yet another camp on the main line of communication through the
county had its site at War Dykes, or Black Dykes, three miles north
of Brechin. The chief camp on the southern route was probably that
of Haerfaulds, near Kirkbuddo. It measures 2280 by 1080 feet and is
believed to have been capable of holding 10,000 men. The two routes
may have had their junction at Aesica, which was probably situated
on the South Esk. Time, the utilitarian ignorance of early builders,
and agricultural improvements, have removed most of these Roman
remains; and in particular all traces of the southern route have
been obliterated. Even as late as the end of the eighteenth century
many of these relics were much more easily seen than they are now.
Fortunately measurements of camps and ramparts that have now
disappeared were made in time to record their existence. An aureus,
or gold coin, of the reign of Antoninus Pius was found in the parish
of Kinnell in 1829.
Of the mysterious
monoliths, often called Druidical stones, Angus contains many
examples. When the stone monument consists of two or more uprights
supporting a horizontal slab, it is styled a cromlech. This is
usually found to be a place of burial. Cromlechs are rarer than the
single stones; and it is therefore specially noteworthy that there
is a fine specimen on the Sidlaws in the parish of Auchterhouse.
Another curiosity of the same class is the rocking-stone, a huge
block delicately poised on another, so that it may easily be set in
motion without being dislodged. There used to be specimens at Gilfum-man
in Glenesk and on Hillhead, Kirriemuir.
Besides such gigantic
memorials there are numerous other sepulchral remains—the cairn, the
barrow, the tumulus, the mound—all of them monuments of the honoured
dead. These, it appears, are found neither in mountainous districts
nor in carse lands, but in pastoral regions of the centre and the
north. In Forfarshire such primeval cairns are found in most
parishes. At one time it was enough to open one of these to find
relics of the ancient dead.
Weems are specimens
of very primitive architecture. They are built against the slope of
some hill or under flat dry ground, but so completely covered up as
to make their discovery accidental. A low entrance which must be
crawled through leads by a crooked passage to a chamber dark and
airless but for a small aperture or chimney in the further end. The
floor slopes down until it is possible in some cases for a man to
stand upright, though in others the height of the structure is only
five feet. One of the most perfect of these weems, or Peghts’
houses—perhaps the best in the kingdom—was found on the farm of
Barns in the parish of Airlie. It is 70 feet in length. Another
exists in the face of a brae at Ruthven. In a weem accidentally
discovered in 1871 in a field at Tealing were found horses’ teeth, a
piece of Samian ware, a bracelet, bronze rings, pieces of burial
urns, and ten querns, or hand-mills for grinding corn. These by no
means exhaust the instances in Forfarshire of these dismal but
interesting abodes.
The county, too, has
its specimen of a lake-dwelling or crannog. A crannog was an island,
wholly or partially artificial, situated in a loch and sometimes
joined to the shore by a causeway that might easily be submerged or
destroyed. Such structures, to judge by remains found in them, were
not merely fortresses but dwelling-places for one or more families.
The first Scottish crannog to be brought into prominent notice was
discovered in the Loch of Forfar when it was partially drained in
1780.
The kitchen-midden
already mentioned as having been discovered at Stannergate near
Dundee contained no fewer than twelve stone cists, eight the full
length of a human body, and four shorter ones in which the corpse
had been doubled up. In one cist was a coarse urn. When the Dundee
and Arbroath railway was being made more than half a century ago,
other cists were found in the same neighbourhood, showing that the
place must have been an ancient grave-yard. Twelve feet under the
cists, the workmen came upon large beds of shells. Amongst these
were two antlers of red deer and a piece of flint. This deposit is
probably the oldest of the kind in the district.
Besides such rude
sepulchral remains, traces of ancient forts give evidence of the
doings of the old inhabitants of Angus. The tops of high hills were
used as places of refuge or of observation, and as suitable points
on which to kindle warning beacon fires. Hill forts consist for the
most part of mounds of earth or stone or both, running round the
crests of hills. A remarkable instance was discovered on the Laws, a
rocky, wooded hill near Monifieth. The hill itself is composed of
trap, but on the top was a collection of freestones, which
neighbouring builders long used as a kind of quarry. Having cleared
away what remained, the proprietor discovered a vast series of trap
boulders so put together as to give evidence of having been
foundation walls of some great building. One circular wall about 18
feet thick is pierced by a passage leading into what must have been
a round chamber 40 feet in diameter. The debris contained a stone
cup, a coin, an armlet, iron axes, an iron sword, and charred
remains of bones, wheat and barley. It is now impossible to say
whether these elaborate structures were fortress, temple, or tomb.
It is significant that they should have been erected on a spot
commanding a wide expanse of country.
A famous example of
vitrification as applied to forts exists on Finhaven Hill near
Forfar. The height of the hill is about 600 feet, and the dimensions
of the fort which once crowned its summit are some 400 by 112 feet.
There are traces of internal divisional walls. Many parts of the
walls are vitrified, and contain various kinds of stone fused
together by the external application of heat. This is commonly
supposed to be a Pre-Roman fortification .
By far the most
notable instances of hill forts, whether in Angus or in the whole
country, are those of the Caterthuns in the parish of Menmuir. Two
conjectures have been offered as to the meaning of this name, which
is of Celtic origin: cader dun, hill fort; and caither dun, temple
hill. These marvellous structures are on two hills about
three-quarters of a mile apart and called respectively the White and
the Black Caterthun. The White Caterthun may have got its name from
its rings of white stone; the other, by way of contrast, is black,
the dark lines being scarcely distinguishable at a distance from the
hue of the heather. The White Caterthun is by far the more
important.
The fortress consists
of four concentric circles of stone, the innermost of which is about
80 paces in diameter. “The most extraordinary thing that occurs in
this British fort is the dimensions of the rampart, composed
entirely of large loose stones, being at least 25 feet thick at top,
and upwards of 100 at bottom, reckoning quite to the ditch, which
seems, indeed, to be greatly filled up by the tumbling down of the
stones. The vast labour that it must have cost to amass so
incredible a quantity, and carry them to such a height, surpasses
all description. A single earthen breastwork surrounds the ditch ;
and beyond this, at a distance of about fifty yards on the two
sides, but seventy feet on each end, there is another double
entrenchment of the same sort running round the slope of the hill.
The intermediate space probably served as a camp for the troops,
while the interior post, from its smallness, could only contain a
part of them. The entrance into this is by a single gate on the east
end; but opposite to it there are two leading through the outward
entrenchment, between which a work projects, no doubt for containing
some men posted there as an additional security to that quarter.”
Sculptured stones are
very numerous in Forfarshire, but it is hazardous to dogmatise on
the date or the origin of these. Some, however, belong clearly to
Pagan times, others to Christian.
The pillar-stone at
Kirkton of Dunnichen, with its Z-shaped ornament, comb, mirror, etc.
is evidently of the Pagan period. Cairn Greg, an eminence on the
estate of Linlathen, was found on being excavated to contain a cist,
within which were a bronze dagger and an urn with ashes. Above this
was a sculptured stone pointing to heathen usages and beliefs. The
legend of a dragon-haunted well, where nine maidens are said to have
perished, is as old as the stone, near Balluderon, carved w'th a
transfixed serpent and the zigzag symbol. An inscription on a
sculptured stone at St Vigeans has been regarded as the sole
specimen of Pictish writing that has come down to us. It speaks of
the stone as erected to Droston, son of Voret, of the race of
Fergus; and a Pictish king, Droston, was killed in battle at a spot
a mile or two distant in 729. This stone, which was discovered about
fifty years ago, is a broken cross with interlaced tracery,
grotesque figures, and a hunting scene in which a man kneeling on
one knee is depicted as discharging a cross-bow at a wild boar. On
another fragment are priests tonsured in the Roman manner, not in
the Scottish or Irish, a peculiarity pointing to the year 710 as its
earliest possible date, when Nechtan put his church under St Peter
and adopted the Roman customs. An early Christian monument,
discovered amidst the foundations of the old parish church of
Arbirlot, has on it a cross, two open books, and a small circle. The
sculptured stones of Aberlemno have figures of armed warriors.
Stones have also been
found at Monifieth, Kettins, Craig, Eassie, Farncll, Kirriemuir and
elsewhere in Forfarshire. |