Login

Orkney Archaeology Review 2025…..  

by Bernie Bell - 09:19 on 22 May 2025

 

 

Orkney Archaeology Review 2025…..

 

 

I’ll begin by quoting from page one….

 

“Cover from the Ness of Brodgar – the last discovery on the last day of the dig.”

 

The first article, by Sigurd Towrie,  is entitled….’The last season excavating at the Ness’. 

 

I’ve written about the dig over the years, and also about my feelings about it being over…..

 

The Ness Sleeps

 

The Ness sleeps

Under earth

Under sky

Between Lochs.

 

Grass will come

Flowers will come

To form a blanket

Keeping it safe.

 

Knowing folk will come

To break its slumber

What might they

Uncover?

 

BB Sept. ‘24

 

Here’s the tale our last visit to the dig….

 

 http://www.spanglefish.com/berniesblog/blog.asp?blogid=16925

 

…but I strongly recommend that you buy the Review and read Sigurd’s concise, clear description of the last dig – and remember that the post-excavation work is on-going and needs funding….

 

https://www.nessofbrodgar.co.uk/donate/

 

 

******

 

Steve Sankey explains the plans to re-open the Tomb of the Eagles – aka Isbister Chambered Cairn – aka, to me, the Eagle Cairn rather than ‘tomb’.

 

I see the smaller cairns as being like Parish churches, for the local folk.  Old churches often have people buried under the floor, that doesn’t make them just ‘tombs’ though, does it?  They were for all the big human things – joining – naming - and acknowledging that the spirit was returning to Spirit. 

Other, more knowledgeable, people have said this too, and the more you look at it, the more it makes sense.   I certainly see this as being the case with the Eagle Cairn.

 

Steve tells of a plan to build a replica tomb to make the interior of the cairn accessible to those unable to enter it.  This has been done with a house at Skara Brae and is A GOOD THING!

 I’ll be interested to see if this plan comes to fruition as I, personally, would no longer be able to scuttle along the entrance passage as I used to! 

A replica can’t give the feel of the place, but can reproduce and present the factual archaeology.

 

******

 

Hugo Anderson-Whymark and Vicki Cummings tell of how the tomb at Blomuir, Holm was discovered in 1896, noted and reported on by local antiquary James Walls Cursiter, then forgotten!

 

Since 2020, interest has been re-kindled and excavations have taken place.  The tomb is exceptional due to the presence of intact and un-touched deposits.  Many of the tombs previously discovered in Orkney had already been ‘emptied’ or damaged – with the exception of the Tomb of the Eagles!

 

******

 

And now for something  completely different……moving forward in time a few thousand years……in 2024 winter storms exposed the timber of a wrecked ship at the Sands O’ Erraby, Sanday.  The experts are still working on these timbers, which show similarities to English and Dutch shipbuilding techniques of the 17th and 18th Centuries.

 

To find out more, you’ll need to read the article by Ben Saunders!

 

Fact is…… you’ll need to buy the Review to read……

 

Memoir of excavations in Orkney by Anna Richie

 

Review: Stone Circles, a Field Guide by David Drever

 

A Glass Act?  by Martin Carruthers

 

Orkney Museum: New Acquisitions by Dr Siobhan Cooke-Miller

 

The Saga of the Earls of Orkney by Judith Jesch

 

Margery Isobel Platt by Kevin Kerr

 

And ….

 

Colin Renfrew and the Orcadian Neolithic by Dr. Colin Richards.

 

 

The Review is available from The Orcadian Bookshop or the Orkney Archaeology Society on-line shop, along with Reviews from previous years…

 

https://shop.orkneyarchaeologysociety.org.uk/

 


Add your comment

Your Name


Your Email (only if you are happy to have it on the site)


Your Comment - no HTML or weblinks


Enter this number in the box below and click Send - why?Unfortunately we have to do this to prevent the system being swamped by automated spam

 
Please note that whenever you submit something which may be publicly shown on a website you should take care not to make any statements which could be considered defamatory to any person or organisation.
Click for Map
sitemap | cookie policy | privacy policy | accessibility statement