Bullion Stone
10th-century sculptures10th century in ScotlandCollections of the National Museums of ScotlandPictish stonesScottish history stubs ... and 1 more
United Kingdom sculpture stubs
The Bullion Stone is a late carved Pictish stone, which is unusual in containing a figure; it dates to c. 900–950. It was discovered in 1933 at Bullion field, Invergowrie, during the construction of a road and is now located in the Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh. The image on the stone is unique amongst Pictish stones discovered thus far. It depicts a bald, bearded man on a weary horse, carrying a shield and drinking from a very large drinking horn with a bird's head terminal, a parallel that has been noted to the Torrs Horns, also in the museum, of nearly 1,000 years earlier.
Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bullion Stone (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).Bullion Stone
Chambers Street, City of Edinburgh Old Town
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)
Latitude | Longitude |
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N 55.946991 ° | E -3.189183 ° |
Address
National Museum of Scotland
Chambers Street
EH1 1JF City of Edinburgh, Old Town
Scotland, United Kingdom
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