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| Canticle for a Lost Nation: part II by Marian Youngblood |
| If Pictish sagas could be unearthed from the oblivion into which they descended after 'union' with the Scots, |
| Nechtan highking of Picts, the last in the Heroic Age of Pictish warriors, anointed leader of his people, |
| evangelising monarch, would top the bill. Within less than 30 years (706-729) he brought deliverance to his land |
| from Dark Age beliefs and petty rivalries and united them in church, wealth and nationalism. He was one of few |
| Pictish royals to die in his bed (732). |
| Fortunately church historian Bede was writing a contemporary account during Nechtan's reign (he died within |
| three years of the great king); coincidentally Annals being written at Iona are particularly detailed and accurate at |
| that time; so our sources do not draw a complete blank. Bede was a meticulous researcher, particularly in |
| ecclesiastical matters, and Nechtan was considered both spiritually and socially enlightened. |
| In the last quarter of the seventh century, the two most powerful northern nations had fought a battle which was |
| to be a cultural watershed: Nechtansmere (685) was fought on Dunnichen Moss near Forfar in southern |
| Pictish heartland; a Pictish victory and death of Anglian king Ecgfrith put an end to Northumbrian interference |
| in Pictish affairs. A small outpost of Anglian religious education at Abercorn-on-Forth retreated to Northumbria |
| and the two nations returned to relatively amicable relations until the end of the century. Six years later Nechtan |
| was to take the throne. |
| He came from impeccable matrilineal succession of the Royal house connected to Bridei son of Beli (c.672-93) |
| who had fought 'for the inheritance of his (maternal) grandfather' at Dunnichen when Nechtan himself was an |
| impressionable child at court; so the cataclysmic turnaround of affairs which resulted, of great Northumbria |
| having to hand back part of conquered Pictland to the Picts, must have made a deep impression on him. When |
| he came to the throne in 706, following his brother Bridei son of Derile (697-706), Nechtan son of Derile was |
| well versed in power, knew ecclesiastical ropes and how to wield them and understood the importance of |
| allying himself with Rome, unlike the rustic, colonial Celtic church of Columba's followers centred on Iona. |
| While not available to us until recopied in the 12th century, the ancient origin legend of the kingdom of the |
| Picts is preserved in the Irish quatrain: |
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'Morsheimer do Cruithne clainn
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raindset Albain i secht raind;
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Cait, Cé, Cirig, cétach clann
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Fib Fidach, Fotla, Fortrenn
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Ocus is o ainm gach fir dib fil for a fearand.'
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| 'seven of Cruithne's children divided Alba into seven divisions; the portion of Cat, of Cé, of Cirig a warlike |
| clan, the kingdoms of Fife, Fidach, Fotla and Fortriu; and the name of each of them remains upon his land.' |
| These were the sub-kingdoms of his realm: in the north, Cat (Caithness), Cé (Mar and Buchan) and Fidach |
| (Moray and inland Banff); south of the Mounth: Cirig became Magh Circenn, the plain of the Mearns; Fib |
| (Fife), Fotla (Atholl) and centre of the court, Fortriu (present Forteviot). By contemporary standards, it was |
| a massive kingdom to administer and rule |
| Throughout his childhood, Nechtan was educated in the highest monasteries of the day, fluent in all northern |
| British dialects and Gaelic learned on visits to Iona, maintained through contact with a Columban familia of |
| monks who attended Nechtan's brother Bridei's court. The little enclave persisted from the time the Anglian |
| Abercorn mission had returned south of what became the permanent border. Good relations were maintained |
| with the Anglian church through contact with Jarrow - a clever device which allowed the Pictish court to be |
| fully informed on church doctrine via both outlets: Iona providing a 'celtic' connection with the Irish church, |
| and Northumberland providing a direct line to Rome. |
| Within five years of his accession, Nechtan had decided to ask his powerful Northumbrian neighbours - |
| descendants of those who had fought and lost in 685 - for advice on how to go about building stone |
| churches throughout his kingdom, along the lines of those already spreading in Anglia, 'in the manner of Rome'; |
| he knew not only that this request would be fulfilled, but that by spiritually kneeling before Rome, he was |
| joining a European alliance of wealthy and powerful nations. Bede's superior, Abbot Ceolfrith of the Jarrow |
| monastery, responded volubly, subsequently sending architects to Nechtan to assist in his nationwide reform. |
| Peterkirks |
| These stone churches were to become the first network of Peterkirks throughout Pictland: from St Peter's |
| at Restenneth in Forfarshire through the Mearns (Meigle, Tealing); over the Mounth into Mar and Buchan, |
| foundations to Peter were placed at Glenbuchat, Peterculter, Aberdeen (Spittal), Fyvie, Peterugie (Peterhead), |
| Deer, Rathven-in-Enzie (now at Buckie), Bellie, Essil-Dipple, Duffus, Drumdelgie and Inveravon. Because |
| they were made of stone, rather than earlier turf cells, they were in the later vernacular called 'fite kirks' |
| (white, as gleaming stone) and two of these survive - albeit altered - at Tyrie in Buchan and Rayne in the |
| Garioch. |
| Along with the request for physical assistance, Nechtan asked for guidance in the correct calculation and |
| maintaining of Easter Tables. This matter had been a matter of stigma among northern kings since the religious |
| controversy at the 664 Whitby synod nearly 50 years before. Columban Iona had continued to calculate by |
| the antiquated calendar, a lumbering process which sometimes had them celebrating on wildly differing dates; |
| while Anglian Northumbria was more modern, calculating according to tables approved by popes in Rome. |
| Essentially papal calendars were never going to celebrate alongside the Jews: Easter had to be after spring |
| equinox, but separate from Passover. Easter for the Picts was obviously a festival which was going to |
| catch on, accustomed as they were to sacred seasonal celebrations. The wave spread like wildfire through a |
| nation only recently converted in pockets by wandering monks. |
| The northern world did not have to wait long for Iona to 'convert' officially in 716, but by then Nechtan had |
| already decided: he had accepted Roman tables, had begun building stone churches nationwide in the name |
| of Peter; his monks now wore the 'Roman' tonsure; all he had to do was to thank his southern neighbours |
| politely for assistance and equally politely, ask the Columban monks at court to leave. In his first decade as |
| king he had consolidated a strong alliance, formed the matrix of a new religion for all his peoples, and, |
| because with religion came learning, had initiated a process which was to educate at least the Pictish upper |
| classes, thereby making his kingdom a superior Christian power. If he had retained the Columban familia at |
| court, its monastic simplicity would have continued to relate religious matters to 'conversations with God'. |
| By introducing both the building programme, Latin instruction through the church and the correct way to |
| celebrate the highest festival of that Church, he was to elevate his nation into the light, but a light which he |
| controlled. It was a brilliant concept by a northern king to spread religion by secular means. Significantly, |
| 175 years later, the then Scots ruling dynasty was still struggling with this power of lord over church, when |
| before 889 king Giric made history by 'liberating' the Church which was 'under servitude up to that time, |
| after the fashion of the Picts'. |
| Nechtan's new wave relied heavily on his nobility for its introduction: in his scattered nation where there |
| was a lordly stronghold, there would be a private chapel; if no foundation already existed dedicated to |
| British wandering holy men of the previous wave a century before, a stone church would appear in Peter's |
| name - the new fashion. Copying out Easter tables and sacred Latin texts became the norm for the |
| educated. A Latin chronicle appeared. Previously the sole domain of Irish, and Welsh monasteries, it |
| contained a Pictish king-list celebrating and chronicling Nechtan's royal line which Anglian, Welsh and Irish |
| chroniclers were quick to copy. But, with the new wave came something which Picts across the land |
| understood. The message was carved in stone. |
| Class II cross-slabs date from Nechtan's reform: either mounted warriors conversing with angels, or the |
| cross carefully fused with pre-Christian symbols which were familiar, the message was clear: landed Pictish |
| aristocrats are following in the ways of Christian heroes - and you can too! |
| In Nechtan's second decade as king, centres for carving the sophisticated new imagery seemed to spring up |
| everywhere; in Angus there is a cluster of class II stones (Meigle, Aberlemno, Brechin); the new religion |
| took hold at centres around the Moray Firth : at Rosemarkie - a former Peterkirk - and at Kineddar-Spynie |
| near the great stronghold of Duffus with its Peterkirk where at least 26 fragmentary slabs have been found. At |
| least as many have been found at Tarbat-on-Beauly within monastic walls. Conservative Cé, the provinces of |
| Mar and Buchan, seem to have held out the longest: with only the merest scattering of cross slabs within a huge |
| proliferation of (class I) pre-Christian symbol stones. Exceptionally, it was at Deer in Buchan within that |
| conservative culture that monks produced the exquisite calf-vellum sacred pocket gospel called the Book of |
| Deer |
| A number of Pictish holy men play a rôle in Nechtan's great plan. After all, Latin was not exactly a language |
| the countryman was going to pick up spontaneously. Bede says Nechtan had promised to introduce Latin |
| usage for his people 'insofar as their remoteness from the Roman language would allow.' So it was essential |
| his bishops - already fluent in Latin - were completely familiar with Pictish patterns of speech. Gone were the |
| days before 585 when Irish Columba had needed an interpreter to speak to king Bridei son of Maelcon at the |
| Pictish court in Inverness. Nechton used Picts to speak to Picts. One of them, Bishop Fergus, attended Rome |
| in 721 to sign the decrees, presumably on his king's behalf. This saint features both south and north of the |
| Mounth: as patron of Glamis at the centre of cross slab carving in Forfarshire; but, as we know him, patron |
| of Moy in Moray, St Fergus in Buchan and, most significantly, Dyce which has one of the few magnificent |
| cross slabs in Aberdeenshire. CÈ was conservative, not pagan. The simple cross was already understood. |
| [ Canticle I, Leopard, October 2001] |
| Nechtan's Golden Age had begun and it seemed as if it might go on forever. |
| ©2001-2004Marian Youngblood |
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| ©1998-2004 Friends of Grampian Stones - Editor: Marian Youngblood |