Pictish Beast
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The Pictish Beast (sometimes Pictish Dragon or Pictish Elephant) is an artistic representation of an animal depicted on Pictish symbol stones.
Design[]
The Pictish Beast is not easily identifiable with any real animal, but resembles a seahorse, especially when depicted upright. Suggestions have included a dolphin, a kelpie (or each uisge), and even the Loch Ness Monster.
Recent thinking is that the Pictish Beast might be related to the design of dragonesque brooches, which were S-shaped pieces of jewelry, made from the mid-1st to the 2nd century CE, that depict double-headed animals with swirled snouts and distinctive ears. These have been found in southern Scotland and northern England. The strongest evidence for this is the presence on the Mortlach 2 stone of a symbol very similar to such a brooch, next to and in the same alignment as a Pictish Beast.
The Pictish Beast accounts for about 40% of all Pictish animal depictions, and so was likely of great importance.
The Pictish Beast is thought to have been an important figure in Pictish mythology, and possibly even a political symbol.
St Martin's stone
Strathmartine Castle Stone
See also[]
- Celtic art
- Loch Ness Monster
- Picts
- Kelpie
References[]
This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (June 2017) |
Bibliography[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pictish Beast. |
- Jones, Duncan (2003). A Wee Guide to the Picts. Musselburgh.
- Cessford, Craig (June 2005). "Pictish art and the sea". The Heroic Age: A Journal of Medieval Northwestern Europe (8). ISSN 1526-1867.
External links[]
- Scottish legendary creatures
- Symbols on Pictish stones
- Scottish mythology
- Legendary creature stubs
- Culture stubs
- Scottish history stubs