Class I Pictish symbol stone unearthed on farmland in 2013 near Craigellachie, Moray. The stone is decorated on adjoining faces; the other two faces show no obvious signs of carving. Face 1 is incised with a large eagle, with crescent and V-rod below.
7, 1885, at Craigellachie, B.C. and marked, symbolically, the economic and political binding of a young nation. From coast to coast, two ribbons of steel snaked across Canada's vast and challenging plains and mountains. The Canadian Pacific Railway was ...
Hammered home in 1885, at Craigellachie, B.C., it marked, symbolically, the economic and political binding of a young nation. From coast to coast, two ribbons of steel snaked across Canada's vast and challenging plains and mountains. The Canadian ...
7, 1885, at Craigellachie, B.C., and marked, symbolically, the economic and political binding of a young nation. From coast to coast, two ribbons of steel snaked across Canada's vast and challenging plains and mountains. The Canadian Pacific Railway ...
In 2013, the Class I Pictish symbol stone was discovered by a farmer ploughing land at Dandaleith Farm to the north of Craigellachie. A particularly unusual example with carvings on two adjacent sides, the find has piqued huge interest. Vice president ...
Described as a national treasure, the Dandaleith Stone is a Pictish monument which was uncovered by a farmer in a field at Dandaleith, near Craigellachie, almost two years ago when he broke his plough on the one tonne granite boulder. The stone was ...