Posted on 04/06/2022 8:39:04 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
Excavation leader Gordon Noble works at the site.Image credit: University of Aberdeen
Looks like they were stoned while working with stone.
Several Species Of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together In A Cave And Grooving With A Pict...
“It’s unclear what all of the symbols mean,”
Let the power of suggestion decide! /s
Clearly they are design drawings of bath towel hangers or front door knockers.
Robert E. Howard, the guy who created Conan the Barbarian in 1930s pulp fiction, created some much more notable (but less marketable, I guess) characters, one of which was Bran Mak Morn, a king among 'the people of the heather'.
The Picts never halted the Romans. There wasn’t enough of value to make the total conquest worth the money.
The Wall was built by Hadrian (who gave up Roman territory elsewhere, so he could concentrate on what we now call homosexual pedophilia) and the Antonine Wall further north was abandoned.
Geography favored Hadrian’s Wall, and it served as a boundary between the Empire and the lands beyond, such that taxes could be collected for imports and exports.
I can translate one of the symbols to read, "Let's go Brandon".
Beat me to it.
ISWYDT...................
The Romans were stretched about as far as their empire had ranged during their four centuries of occupation, so yeah, not worth the trouble. As I read somewhere, the whole invasion was largely due to Claudius, emperor at that time, wanting to take Romans’ minds off of domestic issues. Some things just don’t change. And 400 years of Latin-speakers inhabiting the British Isles is why we have so much latin embedded in English, which is Germanic in origin. History is a fascinating thing; I wish I had more time to study it.
Claudius didn't have the physique to lead troops in battle, but he wanted to have at least one conquest in his legacy. In recent years the amount of political alliance, trade, and Roman patronage in Britain has been talked about, also the possibility that Gen. Agricola made a recon in force in Ireland. There's some evidence (not enough) that the Romans had a trading post and port just north of what is now Dublin -- not a conquest, just a presence. Claudius' successor Nero added to Roman holdings in Britain, and future emperor Vespasian rocketed across the entire south, in one season, reducing all the hillforts.
Classic!
The Pictish symbols look similar to some crop circles.
The Picts seem to still be all around the British Isles, where today they paint their symbols in the fields of the farms and everyone calls them “crop circles”. LOL
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