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Wooden carving of a female figure

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found at Ballachulish, Inverness-shire

Wooden carving of a female figure
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This wooden figure was found buried in the peat at Ballachulish, Lochaber, covered with the remains of a wickerwork structure. It was probably an idol associated with fertility. Modern dating methods have shown that it dates from between 730 and 520 BC.

The female figure holds a phallic object over her abdomen. It was waterlogged when found and split on drying, which greatly distorted its original form. The eyes retain their quartzite pebbles but the nose has broken off.

The Ballachulish figure is female and probably represents a goddess. But who she was, or what she represented, is unknown. The peat bog where she was found, which overlooks the entrance to a sea loch, was probably a sacred place.

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