
Product Description The focus of this research is on the later prehistoric period, from the earliest constructional origins of western Scotland crannogs in the late Bronze Age through to their apparent emergence as status dwellings in the Early Historic period after the mid first millennium AD. The aim is to investigate the ways in which crannogs functioned as settlements, both on a practical, economic as well as a symbolic and socio-cultural level. Throughout, the primary concern is with contextualisation, considering crannogs within their correct chronological and cultural context through the critical analysis of dating evidence as well as the identification of the relevant ritual and symbolic themes- i.e. the Iron Age veneration of water. It is argued in this book that the stereotypical view of a crannog that has largely been derived from the results of work carried out on Irish crannogs has been misleading in the case of the Scottish sites, tending towards a view of crannogs as high-status strongholds, often as royal seats. Though crannogs were certainly a significant feature of the Early Historic period in Scotland, there is as yet no evidence of direct connections to royalty in this period and, based on the currently available evidence, the characterisation of crannogs as high status sites is misguided in the context of their late Bronze and Iron Age origins. About the Author Graeme Cavers is a Director of AOC Archaeology Group. He has a long-standing interest in wetland archaeology and, following completion of a PhD on crannogs and later prehistoric settlement, has taken an active role in the development of the Scottish Wetland Archaeology Programme’s research into lake settlement in SW Scotland. He has directed excavations at several crannog sites in Argyll and Wigtownshire, and continues to pursue his interest in the archaeology of the Iron Age.
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