Chapter 4th
The Ancient Monuments &
Curiosities of this Countrey
There is in Hoy, lying betuixt tuo Hills, a
ston called the Dwarfieston: threttie six foot long, eighteen
foot broad & nine foot thick, hollowed within by the hand of some
meason (for the prints of the meason-irons are to be seen on itt to
this verie hour) with a squair hole
of
p. 20
of about tuo foot hight for the entrie and a ston
proportionable standing before itt for the door. Within att one end
is a bedd excellentlie hewen out of the ston, with a pillow qrin tuo
men may Convenientlie lye att their full length. Att the other end
is aCouch & in the midle a hearth for a fire wt Round hole cutt
out above for the chimney. Itts thought itt hes been the residence
of some melancholie hermite But ye vulgar legand sayes there wes once
a famous giant residing in yt ile who whith his wife lived in that ston
as their castle.
Illustration
Att the west end of that stone stands ane exceeding
high mountain, called the ward-hill off Hoy: neer the top of
which, in the moneths of may, June & July, about midday is seen
something yt shines & sparkes admirablie and which will be seen
a great way off. It hath shined more brightlie before then itt does
now. But what that is, tho manie have climbed up the hill & attempted
to search for itt, yet they could find nothing. The vulgar talks off
itt as some inchanted Carbuncle, But I rather take itt to be some water
sliding doun the face off a smooth rock which, when the Sun att such
a tyme shines upon the reflection causeth that admirable splendor.
Att Stennis where the Loch is narrowest in
the midle
have=
p. 21
haveing a causey off stons over itt for a Bridge there
is att the south end of the Bridge a Round, sett about with high smooth
stons or flaggs (with out anie engraveing) of about 20 foot high above
ground, six foot broad & a foot or tuo thick. Betuixt yt Round
& the Bridge are tuo stons standing of that same bigness with the
rest, whereof one heth a round hole in the midst of itt. And att the
other end of the Bridge, about half a mile removed from it, is a Lairger
round of about a hundred & ten paces diameter, sett about with such
stons as the former save yt some of ym are fallen doun. And att both
east & west off this biger Round, are tuo artificiall (as is thought)
green mounts. Both these Rounds are ditched about & for the Satisfaction
of the Reader I have sett doun ye figure of ye Greater.
Illustration
p. 22
some conceive yt these Rounds have been places qr
in tuo opposite armies encamped. But others more probablie think that
they wer the High places in the Pagan times, where on
sacrifices wer offered & that these tuo mounts wer the places where
the ashes off the sacrifices wer flung. And this is the more probable
Because Boethius in the Lyfe of Mainus K of Scots makes mention
of yt kynd off high stons, calling them ye Temples off the Gods.
His words are these “In memorie off what king Mainus ordained
anent the worship of the Gods, there remains yet in our dayes manie
Huge stons draun to gither in forme off a circle, named be ye people
the ancient temples of the Gods: and itt is no small admiration
to Considder by what airt or strength so huge stons have been brought
to gither.
You will find beside in manie Places of this Countrey
Obelisks or huge high stons, sett in the Ground, Like the former,
& standing apairt (and indeed they are so bigg yt non sees them,
but wonders by what engines they have been erected) which are thought
to have bein sett up, either as a monument of some Remarkeable person
that hes been buried there. That way of honoring deserving & valiant
persones being the invention of king Reuther as Boethius sayes.
Illustration
There
p. 23
There is in Rousa, betuixt high Mountains a
place called the Camps of Jupiter fring. The name is strainge
& wold import some notable accident, but qt itt was I could not
learne.
Att the west end of the Mainland near Skeall on ye
top of high Rocks for above a quarter off a mile in length, there is
something like a street, all sett in reed clay, with a sort of reedish
stons, off severall figures & magnitudes, haveing the Images &
representations of severall things as itt wer engraven upon them &
which is verie strainge, most off these stons when they are raised up,
have yt same image engraven under qch they hed above. That they are
so figured by airt is not probable, nor can the reason of natures way
in their engraveing be readilie given. However I have given you a specimen
of some of them in the following figures.
Illustrations (four)
p. 24
In the Links of Skeall, where the Sand is blowin away
with the wind, are found severall places built four square, about a
foot squaire with stons about weell cemented togither & a ston lying
on the mouth haveing some black earth in them. The like of which are
also found in the Links of Rousum in Stronsa where also is found this
remarkeable Monument the figure of qch I hve heer set doun.
Itt is a wholl round ston, almost like a half barrell, hollow within,
sharp edged att ye top haveing a Bottom Joyned like the Bottom of a
Barrell on the mouth wes a Round ston, conform to the mouth of the
monument & above that a Lairger ston for the preservation of the
wholl. Within wes found nothing but reed clay & Burnt Bones a parcell
of which I sent to Sr Robert Sibbald, to whom also I purposed to have
sent ye whol Monument, had itt not broken in peeces as they wer takeing
itt from its seat. He like yt this as also these other four squair
Monuments have been some off these Ancient Urns qrin the Romans, when
they wer in this Countrey, Laid up the ashes of their dead.
Illustration
p. 25
Likewise in the Links of Tranabie in westra, have
been found graves in the sand (after the sand hes been blowin away with
the wind) in some of which wes seen a man lying with his sword on the
ane hand & a danes ax, on the other, & others yt have
hed doggs & combs & knives buried with them which seems to ane
instance of the way how the Danes ( when they wer in this Countrey)
buried their dead, as the former wes of the Romanes. Besyde in
manie places of the Countrey are found litle hillocks in this forme
which may be supposed to be the sepulchers of the Ancient Pights for
Tacitus tells yt itt wes the way of the Ancient Germans Verstegan
yt itt wes the way of the Saxons to lay dead bodies on the Ground
& cover them over with turves and clods of earth in the fashion
of a litle hillock. Hence itt seems yt the manie houses & villages
in this Countrey, which are called be the name of Brogh and which are
all of them built upon or besyde some such hillock, have been cemetaries
for the bureing off the dead in the tyme of the Pights & Saxons:
for the word Brogh in the old Teutonick language signifies a Burying
place.
Moreover in verie manie places of this Countrey are
to be seen the ruins & vestiges ofgreat, but Antick buildings, most
of them now covered over with earth & called Pights houses some
off them which it is like, have been the forts & residences off
the Pights, or Danes when they possessed this Countrey. Among the Rest,
there is one in the Ile of Wyre called the castell of Cubbirow
(or rather Coppirow which in ye Teutonick Language
signi
p. 26
signifies, a towr of securitie from outward violence)
itt is trenched about off itt nothing new remains but ye first storie:
itt is a perfect squaire the wall being eight foott thick stronglie
built & cemented with lime ye breadth or length within walls not
being above ten foot, haveing a lairge door & a small long slitt
for the window off yt Cubbirow ye Comon people report manie idle fables
not fitt to be inserted heer.
In the Parochin of Evie, near the sea, are some small
hillocks, which frequentlie in the might tyme appear all in a fire.
Like wise the kirk of Evie, called St Nicholas is seen full of
Light as iff torches or candells wer burning in itt all night. This
amazes the people greatlie, but possiblie it is nothing else but some
thich glutinous metior that receives that Light from ye starrs.
Att the noup-head in westra is a Rock surrounded with
the sea called Less which the Inhabitants of yt Ile say hes this
strainge propertie, that iff a man goe upon itt haveing a peece of iron
upon him (an itt wer but ane iron naile in his shoe) the sea will instantlie
swell in such a tempestous way that no Boat cane come neer to take him
off, and yt the sea will not be setled till the peece of Iron be flung
into the sea. I being there the last year to make ane experiment of
itt, offered a shilling to a poor fellow to goe upon the rock with a
peece of iron but he wold not goe upon itt on anie terms.
Sometyme about this Countrey are seen these men which
they call Finmen. Tuo years agoe one wes
seen
p. 27
seen sometym sailing sometym rowing up & dooun
in his litle Boat, att the south end of the Ile of Eda. Most of the
people of the Ile flocked to see him, & when they adventured to
putt out a Boat with men to see iff they could apprehend him, he presentlie
fled away most swiftlie. This same year another wes seen from westra,
since which tyme they have gott few or no fishes: for they have this
Remarque heer that these finnmen drive away the fishes from the
place to which they come.