Cairnpapple Hill

Cairnpapple Hill

Infobox Mountain
Name = Cairnpapple Hill
Photo = CairnpappleHill.jpg
Caption = Burial mound on Cairnpapple Hill
Elevation = 312 m (1,023 ft)
Location = West Lothian, Scotland
Range =
Prominence = "c." 173 m
Coordinates =
Topographic
OS "Landranger" 65
Type =
Age =
Easiest route =
Grid_ref_UK = NS987711
Listing = Marilyn, County top (West Lothian)
Translation =
Language =
Pronunciation =

Cairnpapple Hill is a hill with a dominating position in central lowland Scotland with views from coast to coast. Its summit is the highest point in West Lothian. It was used and re-used as a major ritual site over about 4000 years, and in its day would have been comparable to better known sites like the Standing Stones of Stenness. The summit lies 312 m above sea level, and is about 2 miles (3 km) north of Bathgate. In the 19th century the site was completely concealed by trees, then in 1947–1948 excavations by Stuart Piggott found a series of ritual monuments from successive prehistoric periods. In 1998, Gordon Barclay re-interpreted the site for Historic Scotland.

Neolithic

Neolithic rituals began about 3500 BC with signs of small hearths, and precious objects left on the hill, presumably as offerings, including fine pottery bowls and stone axe heads imported from Cumbria and Wales.

Probably around 2500 BC major henge monuments were constructed with the hilltop being surrounded by a bank outside a ditch about 12 ft (3.5 m) wide cut over 3 ft (1 m) into the rock, with wide entrances from north and south. Inside this an egg-shaped setting of 24 uprights (thought to have been timber posts, or possibly standing stones) enclosed an inner setting of similar uprights.

Bronze Age

Some time later a Bronze age rituals added a small stone and clay cairn just off centre inside the monument, with a 7 ft (2 m) high standing stone to the east and a setting of smaller stones. Also aligned to this cairn were sockets for three upright stones at the centre of an arc of seven small pits, six of which contained cremated bones and two contained remains of bone skewer pins. Under the cairn traces were found of at least one burial, with wooden objects (perhaps a mask and club) and beaker people style pottery which indicates a date around 2000 BC.

This cairn was later covered by a second much larger cairn about 50 ft (15 m) across and several yards (metres) high, with a kerb of massive stone slabs, which incorporated Bronze age burial cists, one of which contained a food vessel pot. Subsequently more stone was brought in to increase this cairn to about 100 ft (30 m) diameter, enclosing two cremation burials in inverted urns and now covering the original ditch and bank, making the whole site a tomb monument. Lastly, inside the ditch to the east four graves considered Iron age are now thought to be early Christian because of their east-west alignment, and are dated to around 500 to 1000.

Present day

The site is open to the public April to September (check opening times) and has a small visitor centre. The 1940s excavations have been partly covered by a concrete dome replicating the second cairn (although the dome is much higher than the cairn and gives a misleading impression of how the site looked) so that visitors can go inside what was once a solid cairn and see the reconstructed graves, and outside this the surrounding post holes and graves are marked by being filled with colour coded gravel like an archaeological plan, with the red gravel indicating upright pits, and the white gravel denoting the alleged Christian burials.

Derivation of the name

Although there is still some confusion about the origin of the name Cairnpapple Hill, or the alternative "Cairniepapple", its meaning can be guessed to a certain extent. It is uncertain whether the name comes from a Brythonic language, related to Welsh, or a Goidelic one, such as Scottish Gaelic, or a mixture of the two. The first part, "cairn-" means cairn, either from Brythonic (e.g. Welsh "carn") or Goidelic (e.g. Gaelic "càrn" or "càirn"). The second part "-ie-", means "of the", as in Welsh "y" or Gaelic "a"'. The third part is the most problematic, possibly meaning any of "tent" (Welsh "pabell", Gaelic "puball"), "people/congregation" (Welsh "pob(o)l", Gaelic "pobull"), or even "eye" (compare Old Welsh "pubell"). Thus, "Cairniepapple" is most likely to mean "Cairn of the tent", "Cairn of the people", or "Cairn of the eye". Note that many other explanations have also been suggested. Another meaning, put forward in the documentary Before Scotland (written and presented by historian Alistair Moffat), is Priest Rock.

References

* Scotland Before History - Stuart Piggott, Edinburgh University Press 1982, ISBN 0-85224-348-0
* Scotland's Hidden History - Ian Armit, Tempus (in association with Historic Scotland) 1998, ISBN 0-7486-6067-4
* Guide to Prehistoric Scotland - Richard Feachem, B.T.Batsford Ltd. 1977, ISBN 0-7134-3264-0

External links

*historic-scotland-link|050


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