| FOGS News Volume X number 2 vernal equinox 1999 |
|
| Picts, Kings, Saints, Chronicles |
| A PICTISH one-day conference arranged in honour of Dr Marjorie O. Anderson on the occasion of her |
| 90th birthday was held in the Quad lower college hall at the University of St Andrews on February 13th |
| 1999. A collaboration by the School of History, Early Medieval Research Group, Scottish Studies Institute |
| & Committee for Dark-Age Studies, its focus and its speakers ensured its success. It was fully booked. |
| While Dr Anderson was unable to hear presentations because of illness, she would have marvelled at the |
| excitement and energy generated in both lecture hall and lunchroom by speakers and delegates all |
| pressing to share new developments in this emergent discipline. |
|
| Drs Simon Taylor and Dauvit Broun unveiled new discoveries in placename survival and the St Andrews |
| foundation legend (versions A and B); Profs. Richard Sharpe & Máire Herbert gave both insular & Irish |
| slants on the political structure of Dál Riata; Isobel Henderson unveiled her theory on specific sculpture |
| schools of the Picts; while both Prof. David Dumville and Dr David Howlett of Universities of Cambridge |
| and Oxford respectively kept delegates on tenterhooks with their expositions on the Chronicle of Kings |
| Kings of Alba and on the sacred numerology of its 12thC verse equivalent, the anonymous De Situ Albanie. |
| Prof. Archie Duncan pulled the audience into the present millennium with his fine elucidation of the Melrose |
| & Holyrood Chronicles, followed by an immaculate summation and tribute to Mrs Anderson by Prof.Geoffrey |
| Barrow of the University of Edinburgh. He concluded, along with the authors of '1066 and All That', that |
| [the conference, sources and] chronicles were 'a damn good thing.' He (along with us) awaits somewhat |
| impatiently the publication of 'all these riches'. Members who would like to be advised either of further |
| conferences or publications produced by Dr Barbara Crawford's Committee for Dark-Age Studies or of |
| details of membership in Dr Simon Taylor's Scottish Placename Society can write to St Andrews Scottish |
| Studies Institute, University of St Andrews, Fife KY16 9AL. |
| See details of Scottish Placename Society on its webpage |
| ©1999 Marian Youngblood |
|
| Membership feedback. . . |
|
| WHITECROSS |
| ABERDEEN member Dr Theodore Allan remarks on the Hill of Whitecross one mile south of Chapel of |
| Garioch at NJ 717 225, visible from the recumbent circle of Balquhain but not from Easter Aquhorthies. |
| His interest is apt at this time of year, as it is a marker hill for sunset on the Feast Day of Bride (Candlemas, |
| and incidentally at its opposite season, Martinmas). However its derivation as the Hill of the White Cross |
| or Crossing may stem from its sacred point of the moon's crossing or setting - as seen from Balquhain - at |
| the end of summer, the pagan White season, and the point where the full moon sets once in 19 years at |
| its minor standstill. This should be a hill to watch in the summer of 2014 at the next standstill! |
|
| The physical crossing of the hill must also have had significance to Bronze Age and Pictish descendants, as |
| anyone who has walked the Netherton of Balquhain road can testify. Leaving behind in the east the Bronze |
| Age burial cairn on Dilly Hill, NJ 751 224, and walking due west, not only does the outline of the Hill of |
| Whitecross draw the eye but for a mile and a half the traveller's visiion is filled with the sacred shape of the |
| Mother mountain Bennachie. At Burnside of Balquhain, NJ 730 225, where the road turns sharply north, |
| the walker can clearly see how the old road used to rise directly west to Whitecross, itself topped by a |
| cairn. An added delight for placename enthusiasts is the name of this miniscule valley created by the burn |
| which springs on Whitecross' lower slopes, flows past Burnside and Mains of Balquhain, turning to join the |
| Urie at Drimmies (which Pictophiles will know has its own symbol stone): it is the Strathnaterick, valley |
| of the serpent of ancient wisdom. This lonely stretch of road, now mostly used by farm traffic, is an |
| inspiration to walk on a spring evening. Thanks to Dr Allan for his observations. |
|
| BLUE MOON |
| TWO OF our regulars communicate on the phenomenon of this year's blue moons, first in January and |
| now in March; Griselda Macgregor in Inverurie and Trevor Allcott in Crimond are both interested in lunar |
| activity, although from slightly different angles: Ms Macgregor requests the reason for the use of the term |
| 'Blue Moon', i.e. for two full moons in the month, while Mr. Alcott likes to extrapolate grander figures of |
| moons in the Metonic cycle. We might cover both in a limited way. First, we find no-one in any context |
| outside Scotland, and perhaps even outside the bounds of Aberdeenshire, using the term 'blue moon' to |
| mean two full moons in the month [in 1999, January 2: 0250; 31:1607, accompanied by a visible |
| penumbral lunar eclipse at 1619; March 2: 0659; 31: 2249 - all times GMT]. The fact that February this |
| year had no full moon at all is purely a figment of modern man's calculations, as our forefathers when they |
| spoke of the moon, meant the month, and vice versa. The arbitrary nature of the 'phenomenon' can be |
| seen, particulary in the second March date, to occur only from Europe west , and not for instance, in |
| Australia, where the second full moon falls within April. While not answering the question, we open the |
| door to any contributions from members who have NE knowledge of folkloric or traditional useage. |
|
| LUNAR STANDSTILLS |
| We have touched on standstill moons before, as the time once every 18.61 years that the moon is seen at |
| its most erratic in the night sky, behaving as if with a 'wobble'. We receive several calls a year requesting |
| more detail for stone-watchers with astronomical leanings - the latest from a member in Edinburgh who |
| prefers anonymity. |
|
| One of our Mensa FOGS, Trevor Allcott puts it simply: |
| 'Correction for our latitude is, according to Reed's Nautical Almanac, 7 minutes. The rule is, when |
| declination is north, subtract from moonrise time and add to moonset time. Reverse applies if declination |
| is south. Our biggest problem is one with which mariners do not have to cope, i.e. the height and distance |
| of the horizon relative to the observer, but I promise, you don't want to know! |
|
| The easiest way is to observe a few full moons, note the times, and correct from the nautical times for |
| that particular observation point.' |
|
| Sensible man. So, for those early birds preparing for their next maximum and minimum moonset and |
| moonrise, when the moon's motion relative to other months is distinctly wobbly, may we suggest |
| marking your diary now: Next major standstill at the full moon nearest to winter solstice occurs in |
| 2005, when the full moon will rise in midwinter at the most northerly point it ever rises; while next |
| minor standstill, or full moon nearest to summer solstice, happens in 2014. |
|
| If we are spared, we may try for a gathering for wobble watchers at a stone circle to compare notes. |
|
| ©1998-9 Trevor Allcott ©1999 Marian Youngblood |
|
Related links:
Victor Reijs' website - investigating lunar standstills |