Record

Gravestone

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Found at Liddel Water, Roxburghshire

Postcard of Gravestone.
000-100-043-520-C
© National Museums Scotland

Gravestone

This early Christian gravestone was found in 1933 in the bed of the Liddel Water in Roxburghshire. It had apparently fallen there from a drystone dyke. The slab would originally have been set upright with the inscription reading vertically downwards.

The part of the stone that was in the ground is visibly less weathered than the rest.

On rare occasions before the Middle Ages a person's life was recorded and celebrated in death by recording his or her name on a gravestone. This is a very early Christian gravestone, where the identity of the deceased is defined by his father.


Record details

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Online ID: 000-100-043-520-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0098: National Museums Scotland
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  X.IB 240
Date: 5th or 6th century
Material: Sandstone
Dimensions: 1830 mm H x 310 mm L x 560 mm W
What: Stone, grave
Subject:
Who:
Where: Scotland, Roxburghshire, Newcastleton, The Brox, Liddel River
Event:
Description: Early Christian gravestone of sandstone with a Latin inscription reading 'Here lies Carantus, son of Cupitianus', from Liddel Water, Roxburghshire, 5th or 6th century
References:
  • Close-Brooks, J. & Stevenson, R.B.K. Dark Age Sculpture. Edinburgh: HMSO, 1982 
Translations:
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