Record

Detail of a wooden carving of a female figure

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found at Ballachulish, Inverness-shire

Postcard of Detail of a wooden carving of a female figure.
000-190-001-100-C
© National Museums Scotland

Detail of a wooden carving of a female figure

This is a detail of a wooden carving of a female figure, probably a goddess, found at Ballachulish in Inverness-shire. The figure was carved between 730 and 520 BC. This is how the figure looked when found, before drying to its current, distorted form.

When found, the carving on the Ballachulish figure was crisp and sharp, suggesting that it had not lain for long on the surface of the peat bog. The arms are defined by raised lines and shallow relief. The right hand holds a phallic object.

In use the figure was set upright, its base being driven into the ground. Bits of gravel are still stuck in the bottom of the figure, like soil in the tread of a shoe. As a final act of ritual the figure was buried in a marshy area, now a peat bog.


Record details

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Online ID: 000-190-001-100-C
Image Rights Holder: National Museums Scotland
Project: 0098: National Museums Scotland
Project description | View all records in project
Ref: National Museums Scotland  H.KL 54
Date: Between 730 and 520 BC
Late Bronze Age, 725 - 500 BC
Material: Wood, oak, with quartzite pebbles for eyes
Dimensions: 1390 mm H x 145 mm L x 190 mm W
What: Carving / figure / female
Subject: Carved woodwork, painted ceilings (NMAS Classification)
Who:
Where: Inverness-shire, Nether Lochaber, Ballachulish
Event:
Description: Figure of a female in oak, the oldest human figure from Scotland, from Ballachulish, 725 - 500 BC
References:
  • Lochaber' multimedia programme, NMS 1995 
Translations:
Related Records:
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