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Pictland
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Pictland
General Urbs
Picts, Wildmen, Blue People... Call them
what you
will. They were some of the fiercest fighters
the "civilized' world ever encountered.
Described as "dark-haired and dark-eyed"
these people were of the old Celtic stock.
Where did these "Barbarians of the North" come from? It is difficult to trace their ancestry, but most think they came out of Scythia and passed across northern Europe, until they found a home in the Highlands.
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Home of the Cruithne, the ancient peoples of Scotland Early Scotland was peopled by many separate tribes with Celtic roots. Naming these ancient people is a difficult, debatable and perhap futile task. There were and are Gaelic, non-Gaelic, and Latin (Roman) names for them, passed down to us through diverse channels, some of which have been twisted through time. The people who lived in this rugged and beautiful land never called themselves Picts but this is a name generally applied to the residents of early Scotland.
"Cruithne" is the Irish name given to a mythical ancestor of the Picts. Legend tells that he divided the land among his seven sons, whose names were Fib, Fidach, Foltlaig, Fortrenn, Caitt, Ce and Circinn. Fib is equated with Fife, the site of Fidach is uncertain, the others being Athfotla, Fortriu, Caithness, Aberdeenshire and Angus respectively. Whether the myth is true or not, the Pictish territories actually did number seven. ![]() The oldest traces of people in Perthshire are of burial mounds, standing stones and circles from 3000BC. Given the widespread traces of these people the population of Strathearn must have been significant, however little is known about them. Around 1000BC the first Celts known as Caledonians arrived. They came into recorded history by making none too friendly contact with the forces of the Roman Empire in 84AD. A great battle took place at Mons Grampius possibly somewhere in Strathearn. The Romans claim to have won this battle but only their version of events remains. Across the southern edge of Strathearn they then built a number of forts (Bertha, Fendoch, Strageath and Ardoch) connected by a line of watchtowers and fortlets. This appears to be the first Roman linear frontier (40 years earlier than Hadrian's Wall). Clearly the Romans considered the Caledonians to the northern side of Strathearn a significant threat. The Romans withdrew after a short time. ![]() From this period stems the roots of why the island of Britain came to be divided into two Kingdoms - the south became a regular fully-Romanized province of the Roman Empire, the north did not. With the decline of Rome the south became 'easy pickings' for Anglo-Saxon invaders, the north did not. ![]() Neighbourhood builders:
New map by MacMorna Niafer
Original map by Amlaidh Niafer Text & graphics by Flidais Niafer & MacMorna Niafer Hood design by Fedelm Cruithni
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