Picts

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A replica of the Hilton of Cadboll Stone.

The Picts were a confederation of tribes who lived to the north of the Forth and Clyde in what later was to become central and northern Scotland. They were the descendants of the Caledonii and other tribes, named by Roman historians or found on the world map of Ptolemy. Pictland, also known as Pictavia, became the Kingdom of Alba during the tenth century and the Picts became the Fir Alban, the men of Scotland.

Although the Picts may have become a forgotten people, their place taken by Celts and others who became the Scots, their legacy remains in many ways. Their language is known by its influence in place names and inscriptions on monuments, tales and legends, and other records such as the writings of Bede. Their artwork is fully evidenced in the many carved stones and crosses that are to be found in a wide area of Northern and Eastern Scotland. Forgotten but not without impact, the Picts remain a somewhat mysterious people, popularly thought of as "barbaric," who live on in myth and legend.

Clach an Tiompain, a Class 1 Pictish symbol stone in Strathpeffer

Origin of Name

The name by which the Picts called themselves is unknown. The Greek word Πικτοί (Latin Picti) first appears in a panegyric written by Eumenius in 297 C.E. and is taken to mean "painted or tattooed people" (Latin pingere "paint"). The Gaels of Ireland and Dál Riata called the Picts Cruithne, (Old Irish cru(i)then-túath), presumably from Proto-Celtic *kwriteno-toutā. There were also people referred to as Cruithne in Ulster, in particular the kings of Dál nAraidi.[1] [2] Their Old English name gave the modern Scots form Pechts.[3]

History

Early history of Picts

Map showing the approximate areas of the kingdom of Fortriu and neighbors c. 800, and the kingdom of Alba c. 900

The early history of Pictland is unclear. In later periods multiple kings existed, ruling over separate kingdoms, with one king, sometimes two, more or less dominating their lesser neighbors.[4] De Situ Albanie, the earliest royal survey of Scotland that named traditional regions" a late document from the twelfth century, the Pictish Chronicle, the Duan Albanach, along with Irish legends, have been used to argue the existence of seven Pictish kingdoms. These are as follows; those in bold are known to have had kings, or are otherwise attested in the Pictish period:

More small kingdoms may have existed. Some evidence suggest that a Pictish kingdom also existed in Orkney.[8] De Situ Albanie is not the most reliable of sources, and the number of kingdoms, one for each of the seven sons of Cruithne, the eponymous founder of the Picts, may well be grounds enough for disbelief.[9] Regardless of the exact number of kingdoms and their names, the Pictish nation was not a united one.

For most of Pictish recorded history the kingdom of Fortriu appears dominant, so much so that king of Fortriu and king of the Picts may mean one and the same thing in the annals. This was previously thought to lie in the area around Perth and the southern Strathearn, whereas recent work has convinced those working in the field that Moray (a name referring to a very much larger area in the High Middle Ages than the county of Moray), was the core of Fortriu.[10]

The Picts are often said to have practiced matrilineal succession on the basis of Irish legends and a statement in Bede's history. In fact, Bede merely says that the Picts used matrilineal succession in exceptional cases.[11] The kings of the Picts when Bede was writing were Bridei and Nechtan, sons of Der Ilei, who indeed claimed the throne through their mother Der Ilei, daughter of an earlier Pictish king.[12]. In Ireland, kings were expected to come from among those who had a great-grandfather who had been king.[13] Kingly fathers were not frequently succeeded by their sons, not because the Picts practiced matrilineal succession, but because they were usually followed by their brothers or cousins, more likely to be experienced men with the authority and the support necessary to be king.[14]

The nature of kingship changed considerably during the centuries of Pictish history. While kings had to be successful war leaders to maintain their authority, kingship became rather less personalized and more institutionalized during this time. Bureaucratic kingship was still far in the future when Pictland became Alba, but the support of the church, and the apparent ability of a small number of families to control the kingship for much of the period from the later seventh century onwards, provided a considerable degree of continuity. In the much same period, the Picts' neighbors in Dál Riata and Northumbria faced considerable difficulties as the stability of succession and rule which they had previously benefitted from came to an end.[15]

The means by which the Pictish confederation formed in Late Antiquity from a number of tribes are as obscure as the processes which created the Franks, the Alamanni and similar confederations in Germany. The presence of the Roman Empire, unfamiliar in size, culture, political systems, and ways of making war, should be noted. It is, however, documented that the Picts were almost continuously at war with the Romans for the duration of their occupation, with many observations of their attacks on Hadrian's Wall.

Recorded history

Cináed mac Ailpín, king of the Picts
Did you know?
The Picts - "painted people" - were ancient inhabitants of Scotland who lived north of Hadrian's Wall

Pictish recorded history begins in the so-called Dark Ages. It appears that they were not the dominant power in Northern Britain for the entire period. Firstly the Gaels of Dál Riata dominated the region, but suffered a series of defeats in the first third of the seventh century.[16] The Angles of Bernicia overwhelmed the adjacent British kingdoms, and the neighboring Anglican kingdom of Deira (Bernicia and Deira later being called Northumbria), was to become the most powerful kingdom in Britain.[17] The Picts were probably tributary to Northumbria until the reign of Bridei map Beli, when the Anglians suffered a defeat at the battle of Dunnichen which halted their expansion northwards. The Northumbrians continued to dominate southern Scotland for the remainder of the Pictish period.

In the reign of Óengus mac Fergusa (729–761), Dál Riata was very much subject to the Pictish king. Although it had its own kings from the 760s, it appears that Dál Riata did not recover.[18] A later Pictish king, Caustantín mac Fergusa (793–820) placed his son Domnall on the throne of Dál Riata (811–835).[19] Pictish attempts to achieve a similar dominance over the Britons of Alt Clut (Dumbarton) were not successful.[20]

The Viking Age brought great changes in Britain and Ireland, no less in Scotland than elsewhere. The kingdom of Dál Riata was destroyed, certainly by the middle of the ninth century, when Ketil Flatnose is said to have founded the Kingdom of the Isles. Northumbria too succumbed to the Vikings, who founded the Kingdom of York, and the Kingdom of Strathclyde was also greatly affected. The king of Fortriu Eógan mac Óengusa, the king of Dál Riata Áed mac Boanta, and many more, were killed in a major battle against the Vikings in 839.[21] The rise of Cínaed mac Ailpín (Kenneth MacAlpin) in the 840s, in the aftermath of this disaster, brought to power the family who would preside over the last days of the Pictish kingdom and found the new kingdom of Alba, although Cínaed himself was never other than king of the Picts.

In the reign of Cínaed's grandson, Caustantín mac Áeda (900–943), the kingdom of the Picts became the kingdom of Alba. The change from Pictland to Alba may not have been noticeable at first; indeed, as we do not know the Pictish name for their land, it may not have been a change at all. The Picts, along with their language, did not disappear suddenly. The process of Gaelicization, which may have begun generations earlier, continued under Caustantín and his successors. When the last inhabitants of Alba were fully Gaelicized, becoming Scots, probably during the eleventh century, the Picts were soon forgotten.[22] Later, they would reappear in myth and legend.[23]

Culture

Society

Archaeology gives some impression of the society of the Picts. Although very little in the way of Pictish writing has survived, Pictish history, from the late sixth century onwards, is known from a variety of sources, including saints' lives, such as that of Columba by Adomnán, and various Irish annals. Although the popular impression of the Picts may be one of an obscure, mysterious people, this is far from being the case. When compared with the generality of Northern, Central and Eastern Europe in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, Pictish history and society are well attested.[24]

The archaeological record provides evidence of the material culture of the Picts. It tells of a society not readily distinguishable from its similar Gaelic and British neighbors, nor very different from the Anglo-Saxons to the south.[25]

As with most peoples in the north of Europe in Late Antiquity, the Picts were farmers living in small communities. Cattle and horses were an obvious sign of wealth and prestige, sheep and pigs were kept in large numbers, and place names suggest that transhumance was common. Animals were small by later standards, although horses from Britain were imported into Ireland as breed-stock to enlarge native horses. From Irish sources it appears that the elite engaged in competitive cattle-breeding for size, and this may have been the case in Pictland also. Carvings show hunting with dogs, and also, unlike in Ireland, with falcons. Cereal crops included wheat, barley, oats, and rye. Vegetables included kale, cabbage, onions, and leeks, peas and beans, turnips and carrots, and some types no longer common, such as skirret. Plants such as wild garlic, nettles, and watercress may have been gathered in the wild. The pastoral economy meant that hides and leather were readily available. Wool was the main source of fibers for clothing, and flax was also common, although it is not clear if it was grown for fibers, for oil, or as a foodstuff. Fish, shellfish, seals and, whales were exploited along coasts and rivers. The importance of domesticated animals argues that meat and milk products were a major part of the diet of ordinary people, while the elite would have eaten a diet rich in meat from farming and hunting.[26] [27]

No Pictish counterparts to the areas of denser settlement around important fortresses in Gaul and southern Britain, or any other significant urban settlements, are known. Larger, but not large, settlements existed around royal forts, such as at Burghead, or associated with religious foundations.[28] No towns are known in Scotland until the twelfth century.[29]

The technology of everyday life is not well recorded, but archaeological evidence shows it to have been similar to that in Ireland and Anglo-Saxon England. Recently, evidence has been found of watermills in Pictland. Kilns were used for drying kernels of wheat or barley, not otherwise easy in the changeable, temperate climate.[30]

The early Picts are associated with piracy and raiding along the coasts of Roman Britain. Even in the Late Middle Ages, the line between traders and pirates was unclear, so that Pictish pirates were probably merchants on other occasions. It is generally assumed that trade collapsed with the Roman Empire, but this is to overstate the case. There is only limited evidence of long-distance trade with Pictland, but tableware and storage vessels from Gaul, probably transported up the Irish Sea, have been found. This trade may have been controlled from Dunadd in Dál Riata, where such goods appear to have been common. While long-distance travel was unusual in Pictish times, it was far from unknown as stories of missionaries, traveling clerics and exiles show.[31]

Reconstructed crannog on Loch Tay

Brochs are popularly associated with the Picts. Although these were built earlier in the Iron Age, with construction ending around 100 C.E., they remained in use into and beyond the Pictish period.[32] Crannogs, which may originate in Neolithic Scotland, may have been rebuilt, and some were still in use in the time of the Picts.[33] The most common sort of buildings would have been roundhouses and rectangular timbered halls.[34] While many churches were built in wood, from the early eighth century, if not earlier, some were built in stone.[35]

The Picts are often said to have tattooed themselves, but evidence for this is limited. Naturalistic depictions of Pictish nobles, hunters, and warriors, male and female, without obvious tattoos, are found on monumental stones. These stones include inscriptions in Latin and Ogham script, not all of which have been deciphered. The well known Pictish symbols found on stones, and elsewhere, are obscure in meaning. A variety of esoteric explanations have been offered, but the simplest conclusion may be that these symbols represent the names of those who had raised, or are commemorated on the stones. Pictish art can be classed as Celtic, and later as Insular.[36] Irish poets portrayed their Pictish counterparts as very much like themselves.[37]

Religion

An early twentieth century depiction of Columba's miracle at the gate of King Bridei's fortress, described in Adomnán's late seventh century Vita Columbae.

Early Pictish religion is presumed to have resembled Celtic polytheism in general, although only place names remain from the pre-Christian era. The date at which the Pictish elite converted to Christianity is uncertain, but there are traditions which place Saint Palladius in Pictland after leaving Ireland, and link Abernethy with Saint Brigid of Kildare.[38] [39] Saint Patrick refers to "apostate Picts," while the poem Y Gododdin does not remark on the Picts as pagans. [40] Bede wrote that Saint Ninian (identified with Saint Finnian of Moville, who died c. 589), had converted the southern Picts. [41] For the identities of Ninian/Finnian see Barbara Yorke [42] Recent archaeological work at Portmahomack places the foundation of the monastery there, an area once assumed to be among the last converted, in the late sixth century. This is contemporary with Bridei mac Maelchon and Columba, but the process of establishing Christianity throughout Pictland will have extended over a much longer period.

Pictland was not solely influenced by Iona and Ireland. It also had ties to churches in Northumbria, as seen in the reign of Nechtan mac Der Ilei. The reported expulsion of Ionan monks and clergy by Nechtan in 717 may have been related to the controversy over the dating of Easter, and the manner of tonsure, where Nechtan appears to have supported the Roman usages, but may equally have been intended to increase royal power over the church.[43] Nonetheless, the evidence of place names suggests a wide area of Ionan influence in Pictland. [44] Likewise, the Cáin Adomnáin (Law of Adomnán, Lex Innocentium) counts Nechtan's brother Bridei among its guarantors.

The importance of monastic centers in Pictland was not perhaps as great as in Ireland. In areas which had been studied, such as Strathspey and Perthshire, it appears that the parochial structure of the High Middle Ages existed in early medieval times. Among the major religious sites of eastern Pictland were Portmahomack, Cennrígmonaid (later Saint Andrews), Dunkeld, Abernethy and Rosemarkie. It appears that these are associated with Pictish kings, which argues for a considerable degree of royal patronage and control of the church.[45]

The harper on the Dupplin Cross, Scotland, circa 800 C.E.

The cult of Saints was, as throughout Christian lands, of great importance in later Pictland. While kings might patronize great Saints, such as Saint Peter in the case of Nechtan, and perhaps Saint Andrew in the case of the second Óengus mac Fergusa, many lesser Saints, some now obscure, were important. The Pictish Saint Drostan appears to have had a wide following in the north in earlier times, although all but forgotten by the twelfth century. Saint Serf of Culross was associated with Nechtan's brother Bridei.[46] It appears, as is well known in later times, that noble kin groups had their own patron saints, and their own churches or abbeys.[47]

Language

The Pictish language has not survived. Evidence is limited to place names and to the names of people found on monuments and the contemporary records. The evidence of place-names and personal names argue strongly that the Picts spoke Insular Celtic languages related to the more southerly Brythonic languages.[48] A number of inscriptions have been argued to be non-Celtic, and on this basis, it has been suggested that non-Celtic languages were also in use.[49]

The absence of surviving written material in Pictish does not mean a pre-literate society. The church certainly required literacy, and could not function without copyists to produce liturgical documents. Pictish iconography shows books being read, and carried, and its naturalistic style gives every reason to suppose that such images were of real life. Literacy was not widespread, but among the senior clergy, and in monasteries, it would have been common enough.[50]

Notes

  1. The Cruithni are discussed by Francis John Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings. (London: Batsford, 1973), 106–109
  2. Dáibhí Ó Cróinín. Early Medieval Ireland: 400–1200. (London: Longman, 1995), 48–50.
  3. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle has pihtas and pehtas.
  4. Dauvit Broun, "Kingship," in ; for Ireland see Francis John Byrne. Irish Kings and High-Kings. (London: Batsford, 1973); and more generally see Dáibhí Ó Cróinín. Early Medieval Ireland: 400–1200. (London: Longman, 1995).
  5. Katherine Forsyth, "Evidence of a lost Pictish Source in the Historia Regum Anglorum of Symeon of Durham," with an appendix by John T. Koch, in Taylor (2000) ; William J. Watson. The History of the Celtic Place-names of Scotland. (original 1926), 108-109
  6. Alan Bruford, "What happened to the Caledonians," in (Cowan & McDonald 2005); Watson, Celtic Place Names, 108-113.
  7. Alex Woolf, "Dun Nechtain, Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts," in The Scottish Historical Review 85 (2) (Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh University Press, 2006); Barbara Yorke, The Conversion of Britain: Religion, Politics and Society c. 600–800. (London: Longman, 2006), 47. Compare earlier works such as Sally M. Foster. Picts, Gaels and Scots: Early Historic Scotland. (London: Batsford, 2004), 33.
  8. Adomnán, Life of Columba, trans. & ed. by Richard Sharpe, (London: Penguin, 1995, editor's notes), 342–343.
  9. Broun, "Seven Kingdoms" in De situ Albanie: A Record of Pictish political geography or imaginary map of ancient Alba," in E.J. Cowan & R. Andrew McDonald,(eds.), Alba: Celtic Scotland in the Medieval Era. (Edinburgh: John Donald, 2005)
  10. Alex Woolf, "Dun Nechtain, Fortriu and the Geography of the Picts," in The Scottish Historical Review 85 (2) (Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh University Press, 2006).
  11. Bede, I, c. 1
  12. Thomas Owen Clancy, "Nechtan son of Derile" in Lynch (2001)
  13. Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings, 35–41 & 122–123, also 108 & 287, stating that derbfhine was practiced by the cruithni in Ireland.
  14. Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings, 35, "Elder for kin, worth for rulership, wisdom for the church." See also Foster, Picts, Gaels and Scots, 32–34; Alfred P. Smyth. Warlords and Holy Men: Scotland AD 80–1000. (Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh Univ. Press, 1984), 67ff.
  15. Broun, "Kingship," ; Broun, "Pictish Kings" ; for Dál Riata, Broun, "Dál Riata," ; for a more positive view Richard Sharpe, "The thriving of Dalriada" in Taylor (2000) ; for Northumbria see N.J. Higham. Kingdom of Northumbria AD 350–1100. (Stroud, UK: Sutton, 1993), 144–149.
  16. At Degsastan in the first decade of the century and several times under Domnall Brecc in the third and fourth decades.
  17. For the kingdoms of Bernicia, and Northumbria, see: Higham, (1993).
  18. Broun, "Pictish Kings," attempts to reconstruct the confused late history of Dál Riata. The silence in the Irish Annals is ignored by Bannerman in "The Scottish Takeover of Pictland and the relics of Columba".
  19. After Broun, "Pictish Kings," but the later history of Dál Riata is very obscure.
  20. Cf. the failed attempts by Óengus mac Fergusa.
  21. Annals of Ulster (s.a. 839): "The (Vikings) won a battle against the men of Fortriu, and Eóganán son of Aengus, Bran son of Óengus, Aed son of Boanta, and others almost innumerable fell there."
  22. Broun, "Dunkeld and the origin of Scottish identity," in Broun & Clancy (eds.) (1999) ; Broun, "National Identity," ; Katherine Forsyth, "Origins: Scotland to 1100," in Jenny Wormald (ed.) Scotland: A History. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005), 28–32; cf. Bannerman, "Scottish Takeover," passim, representing the "traditional" view.
  23. For example, Pechs, and perhaps Pixies. However, Sally Foster quotes John Toland in 1726: "they are apt all over Scotland to make everything Pictish whose origin they do not know." The same could be said of the Picts in myth.
  24. Sources for Pictish history include Irish Annals - the Annals of Ulster, Tigernach, Innisfallen, Ireland (the Four Masters), and Clonmacnoise all report events in Scotland, some frequently; the Lebor Bretnach, Scottish recension of the Historia Britonum of Nennius; the history and continuation of Bede; the Historia Regum Anglorum of Symeon of Durham; the Annales Cambriae; saints' lives; and others.
  25. Ewan Campbell. Saints and Sea-kings: The First Kingdom of the Scots. (Edinburgh, UK: Canongate, 1999) for the Gaels of Dál Riata ; see Chris Lowe. Angels, Fools and Tyrants: Britons and Angles in Southern Scotland. (Edinburgh, UK: Canongate, 1999) for Britons and Anglicans.
  26. Foster, (2004), 49–61
  27. Fergus Kelly. Early Irish Farming: a study based mainly on the law-texts of the seventh and eighth centuries C.E. (School of Celtic Studies/DAIS, Dublin, 2000) provides an extensive review of farming in Ireland in the middle Pictish period.
  28. The interior of the fort at Burghead was some 12 acres (five hectares) in size, see Stephen T. Driscoll, "Burghead" in Lynch (2001); for Verlamion (later Roman Verulamium), a southern British settlement on a very much larger scale, see e.g., Francis Pryor. Britain AD. (London: Harper Perennial, 2005), 64–70.
  29. Patricia Dennison, "Urban settlement: medieval," in Lynch (2001).
  30. Foster, (2004), 52–53.
  31. Trade, see Foster, (2004), 65–68; seafaring in general, see: John Haywood, Dark Age Naval Power. (Hockwold-cum-Wilton, UK: Anglo-Saxon Books, 1999); N.A.M. Rodger. Safeguard of the Sea-A Naval History of Great Britain, volume one: 660–1649. (London: Harper Collins, 1997)
  32. Ian Armit. Towers In The North-The Brochs Of Scotland. (Stroud, UK: Tempus, 2002), chapter 7.
  33. B. A. Crone, "Crannogs and Chronologies," PSAS 123: 245–254.
  34. Foster, (2004), 52–61.
  35. Clancy, "Nechtan," in Lynch (2001); Foster, Picts, Gaels and Scots. 89.
  36. Foster, Picts, Gaels and Scots, 26–28; Laing & Laing, 89ff.; Ritchie, Anna, "Picto-Celtic Culture." in Lynch (2001).
  37. Forsyth, "Evidence of a lost Pictish Source," 27–28.
  38. Clancy, "Nennian recension," in Lynch (2001), 95–96
  39. Alfred P. Smyth. Warlords and Holy Men: Scotland AD 80–1000. (Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh Univ. Press, 1984), 82–83.
  40. Fr. Gilbert Markus, O.P., "Conversion to Christianity," in Lynch (2001).
  41. Bede, III, 4.
  42. Barbara Yorke. The Conversion of Britain: Religion, Politics and Society c. 600–800. (London: Longman, 2006), 129.
  43. Bede, IV, cc. 21–22 ; Thomas Owen Clancy, "Church institutions- early medieval," in Lynch (2001) ; Clancy, "Nechtan," in Lynch (2001)
  44. Simon Taylor, "Seventh-century Iona abbots in Scottish place-names," in Broun & Clancy (1999)
  45. Clancy, "Church institutions,"; Fr. Gilbert Markus, O.P., "Religious life in early medieval." in Lynch (2001).
  46. Clancy, "Cult of Saints," ; Clancy, "Nechtan," ; Taylor, "Iona abbots"
  47. Markus, "Religious life." in Lynch (2001).
  48. Katherine Forsyth. Language in Pictland: the case against 'non-Indo-European Pictish. (Studia Hameliana no. 2). (Utrecht: De Keltische Draak, 1997) ; Glanville Price, "Pictish," in Glanville Price (ed.), Languages in Britain & Ireland. (Oxford, UK: Blackwell, 2000) ; Taylor, "Place names," in Lynch (2001) ; Watson, Celtic Place Names. For K.H. Jackson's views, see "The Language of the Picts" in Wainright (ed.) The Problem of the Picts.
  49. Jackson, "The Language of the Picts," discussed by Katherine Forsyth, "Literacy in Pictland," in Huw Pryce (ed.), Literacy in Medieval Celtic Societies. (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1998)
  50. Forsyth, "Literacy in Pictland," (1998)

References
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External links

All links retrieved November 23, 2022.

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