Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-x5cpj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-30T00:41:18.498Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Prehistoric Annals and Early Medieval Monasticism: Daniel Wilson, James Young Simpson and their Cave Sites

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 September 2010

Kristján Ahronson*
Affiliation:
Kristján Ahronson, School of History, Welsh History and Archaeology, Prifysgol Bangor University, Gwynedd LL57 2DG, UK. E-mail: k.ahronson@bangor.ac.uk
T M Charles-Edwards*
Affiliation:
T M Charles-Edwards, Jesus College, Oxford OX1 3DW, UK. E-mail: thomas.charles-edwards@jesus.ox.ac.uk

Abstract

To deepen our understanding of early medieval exile, the present study characterizes ways in which scholars have studied cave use in Britain and Ireland. As key figures in the history of archaeology, Sir Daniel Wilson and Sir James Young Simpson were crucial for establishing Scotland’s cave sites as subjects for study. Triggered by these two, a century and a half of research has related these places to the flowering of Gaelic monasticism. Nonetheless, fundamental similarities between early Christian communities in Britain and Ireland are at odds with this northern distribution, and bring the question of cave use beyond Scotland sharply into focus. Our paper therefore targets two questions: (1) to what extent were cave sites used by early Christian communities elsewhere in the Insular world; and (2) is our perception of cave use as a particularly north British phenomenon skewed by the long history of Scottish interest in the topic?

Résumé

Dans le but de mieux comprendre nos pensées à propos de l’exil au début du moyen-âge, cette étude caractérise des méthodes employées par les érudits pour étudier l’occupation des grottes en Grande-Bretagne et en Irlande. Etant donné qu’ils étaient des personnages clés de l’histoire de l’archéologie, le rôle de Sir Daniel Wilson et de Sir James Young Simpson fut d’une importance cruciale pour l’établissement des grottes en Écosse comme sujets d’étude. Lancées par ces deux hommes, des recherches d’un siècle et demi ont associé ces sites à l’épanouissement du monachisme gaélique. Néanmoins, les similarités fondamentales entre les premières communautés chrétiennes dans la Grande-Bretagne et l’Irlande ne concordent pas avec cette attribution septentrionale et nous amènent à nous concentrer sur la question de l’occupation des grottes au-delà de l’Écosse. Par conséquent, notre communication cible deux questions : 1) à quel point ces grottes avaient-elles été occupées par les premières communautés chrétiennes dans d’autres parties du monde insulaire; et 2) notre perception de l’occupation des grottes en termes de phénomène particulier au Nord de la Grande-Bretagne a-t-elle été déformée par le fait que ce sujet intéresse les Écossais depuis longtemps?

Zusammenfassung

In dieses Studie werden die Methoden von Wissenschaftlern unter die Lupe genommen, die die Siedlung von Höhlen im Großbritannien und Irland untersucht haben, um unser Verständnis vom frühmittelalterichem Exil zu erweitern. Die wichtigsten Schlüsselfiguren in der Geschichte der Archäologie waren Sir Daniel Wilson und Sir James Young Simpson, beide Forscher waren ausschlaggebend bei der Erkenntnis von schottischen Höhlen als Forschungsobjekte. Diese beiden haben den Anstoß gegeben, daß nach über anderthalb jahrhundert langen Forschungsarbeiten erkannt wurde, daß diese Plätze dem gälischem Mönchswesen zugehörig sind. Trotzdem stehen die fundamentalen Gemeinsamkeiten der frühchristlichen Gemeinschaften aus dem Großbritannien und Irland mit dieser für den Norden typischen Siedlungsverteilung im Konflikt, und stellen deshalb die Nutzung von Höhlen außerhalb Schottlands in den Brennpunkt. Diese Abhandlung hat deshalb zwei Ziele: (1) Inwieweit wurden Höhlen von frühchristlichen Gemeinschaften im übrigen Inselreich benutzt; und (2) ist unsere Vorstellung von der Siedlung von Höhlen als ein typisches nördliches Phänomen durch die lange schottische Forschungsgeschichte geprägt?

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Ahronson, K 2002. ‘Testing the evidence for northern North Atlantic papar: a cave site in southern Iceland’, in The Papar in the North Atlantic: environment and history. Proceedings of a day conference held on 24th February 2001 (ed B Crawford), St John’s House Pap 10, 107120, St Andrews: University of St Andrews, Committee for Dark Age StudiesGoogle Scholar
Ahronson, K (ed) 2003a. ‘Atlantic peoples between fire, ice, river and sea. Past environments in southern Iceland’, Northern Stud, 37, 49–111Google Scholar
Ahronson, K 2003b. ‘One North Atlantic cave settlement: preliminary archaeological and environmental investigations at Seljaland, southern Iceland’, in Ahronson (ed) 2003a, 53–70Google Scholar
Ahronson, K 2003c. ‘The crosses of Columban Iceland: a survey of preliminary research’, in Vínland Revisited: the Norse world at the turn of the first millennium. Selected papers from the Viking Millennium International Symposium, 15–24 September 2000, Newfoundland and Labrador (ed S Lewis-Simpson), 7582, St John’s, Newfoundland: Historic Sites Association of Newfoundland and LabradorGoogle Scholar
Alexander, W L 1857. ‘Opening Address [1st December 1856]’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 2, 298304Google Scholar
Anderson, J 1881. Scotland in Early Christian Times (The Rhind lectures in archaeology for 1879), Edinburgh: David DouglasGoogle Scholar
Anderson, J 1911. ‘Sir James Young Simpson’s work in archaeology’, Edinburgh Medieval J, June, 39Google Scholar
Ash, M 1981. ‘ “A fine, genial, hearty band”: David Laing, Daniel Wilson and Scottish archaeology’, in Bell (ed) 1981, 86–113Google Scholar
Ash, M 1999. ‘Old books, old castles, and old friends: the making of Daniel Wilson’s Archaeology and Prehistoric Annals of Scotland’, in Ash et al 1999, 60–80Google Scholar
Ash, M et al (ed E Hulse) 1999. Thinking with Both Hands: Sir Daniel Wilson in the Old World and the New, Toronto: Toronto University PressGoogle Scholar
Averill, H Keith, G 1999. ‘Daniel Wilson and the University of Toronto’, in Ash et al 1999, 139–210Google Scholar
Bell, A S (ed) 1981. The Scottish Antiquarian Tradition: essays to mark the bicentenary of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and its museum, 1780–1980, Edinburgh: John Donald PublishersCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chalmers, G 1807. Caledonia: or, an Account, historical and topographical, of North Britain; from the most ancient to the present times: with a dictionary of places, chorographical and philological, 3 vols, London: T CadellGoogle Scholar
Charles-Edwards, T M 2007. ‘The lure of the Celtic languages, 1850–1914’, in The Making of the Middle Ages: Liverpool Essays (eds M Costambeys, A Hamer and M Heale), 1535, Liverpool: Liverpool University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, D V 1981. ‘Scottish archaeology in the second half of the nineteenth century’, in Bell (ed) 1981, 114–41Google Scholar
Clarke, D V 2002. ‘ “The foremost figure in all matters relating to Scottish archaeology”: aspects of the work of Joseph Anderson (1832–1926)’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 132, 118Google Scholar
Coles, F R 1911. ‘Notices of rock-hewn caves in the valley of the Esk and other parts of Scotland’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 45, 265301Google Scholar
Colgrave, B (ed and trans) 1940. Two Lives of Saint Cuthbert: a life by an anonymous monk of Lindisfarne and Bede’s prose life, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Colgrave, B (ed and trans) 1956. Felix’s Life of St Guthlac, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Davies, W 1996. ‘ “Protected space” in Britain and Ireland in the middle ages’, in Scotland in Dark Age Britain (ed B Crawford), St John’s House Pap 6, 119, St Andrews: Scottish Cultural PressGoogle Scholar
Doble, G H 1935. Saint Samson in Cornwall, Cornish Saints Ser 36, London: HarrisonGoogle Scholar
Edwards, N 2001. ‘Early-medieval inscribed stones and stone sculpture in Wales’, Medieval Archaeol, 45, 1540CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, I 2001. Early Medieval Sculpture in the West Highlands and Islands, Edinburgh: Society of Antiquaries of Scotland/RCAHMSGoogle Scholar
Flobert, P (ed and trans) 1997. La Vie Ancienne de Saint Samson de Dol, Paris: CNRSGoogle Scholar
Graham, A 1970. ‘Records and opinions: 1780–1930’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 102, 241284Google Scholar
Graham, A 1976. ‘The archaeology of Joseph Anderson’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 107, 279298Google Scholar
Graham-Campbell, J 2004. ‘ “Danes … in this Country”: discovering the Vikings in Scotland’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 134, 201239Google Scholar
Hjartarson, Á Gísladóttir, H 1983. ‘Skollhólahellir’, Árbók hins Íslenzka Fornleifafélags (1982), 123133Google Scholar
Hjartarson, Á, Guðmundsson, G J Gísladóttir, H 1991. Manngerðir Hellar á Íslandi, Reykjavík: Bókaútgáfa MenningarsjóðsGoogle Scholar
Holt, A Guðmundsson, G J 1980. Um Manngerða Hella á Suðurlandi, ReykjavíkGoogle Scholar
Jankulak, K 2009. ‘Adjacent saints’ dedications and early Celtic history’, in Saints’ Cults in the Celtic World (eds S Boardman, J R Davies and E Williamson), 91118, Woodbridge: Boydell & BrewerGoogle Scholar
Kehoe, A B 1998. The Land of Prehistory: a critical history of American archaeology, New York: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Le Bon, E A Darrington, G P 1998. ‘Archaeological survey of the Caiplie Caves Site, Kilrenny, East Fife (NGR 599/058, OS Sheet 59), NMRS N050NE 6.00’, unpublished reportGoogle Scholar
Lubbock, J 1863. ‘Review of Prehistoric Man, Natur Hist Rev, 9, 2630Google Scholar
Macalister, R A S 1945. Corpus Inscriptionum Insularum Celticarum, Blackrock, Ireland: Four Courts Press (repr 1996 with preface by D McManus)Google Scholar
MacQueen, J MacQueen, W 2005. St Nynia, with a translation of the Miracula Nynie Episcopi and the Vita Niniani, Edinburgh: BirlinnGoogle Scholar
Manning, C 2005. ‘Rock shelters and caves associated with Irish saints’, in Above and Beyond: essays in memory of Leo Swan (eds T Condit and T Corlett), 109120, Bray: Wordwell BooksGoogle Scholar
Migne, J P (ed) 1844–64. Vita S. Pauli Primi Eremitæ, in Patrologia Latina 23, cols 17–30Google Scholar
Mowbray, C 1936. ‘Eastern influence on carvings at St Andrews and Nigg, Scotland’, Antiquity, 10, 428440CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mulchrone, K (ed) 1939. Bethu Phátraic: the tripartite life of Patrick, Dublin: Hodges, Figgis & CoGoogle Scholar
Neaves, The Hon Lord 1860. ‘Archaeology, its aims and uses [Opening address – 23rd December 1859]’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 3, 325338Google Scholar
Plummer, C (ed) 1910. Vitae Sanctorum Hiberniae: partim hactenus ineditae ad fidem codicvm manuscriptorum recognovit prolegomenis notis indicibvs instruxit, 2 vols, Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Popper, K R 1994. The Myth of the Framework: in defence of science and rationality, London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Rose, P 2001. ‘Shadows in the imagination: encounters with caves in Cornwall’, Cornish Archaeol, 39–40, 95128Google Scholar
Simpson, J Y 1857. ‘On an old stone-roofed cell or oratory in the island of Inchcolm’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 2, 489528Google Scholar
Simpson, J Y 1861. Archæology: its past and its future work, being the annual address to the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, given January 28, 1861, Edinburgh: Edmonston & DouglasGoogle Scholar
Simpson, J Y 1865. ‘Notices of some ancient sculptures on the walls of caves in Fife’, Proc Soc Antiq Scotl, 6 (Appendix), 135140Google Scholar
Smith, K T Ahronson, K 2003. ‘Dating the cave? The preliminary tephra stratigraphy at Kverkin, Seljaland’, in Ahronson (ed) 2003a, 71–80Google Scholar
Stevenson, R B K 1981. ‘The museum, its beginnings and its development. Part I: to 1858’, in Bell (ed) 1981, 31–85Google Scholar
Stuart, J 1856–67. Sculptured Stones of Scotland, 2 vols, Edinburgh: Spalding ClubGoogle Scholar
Stuart, J (ed) 1872. Archaeological Essays by the late Sir James Young Simpson, Bart, MD, DCL, One of her Majesty’s Physicians for Scotland, and Professor of Medicine and Midwifery in the University of Edinburgh, 2 vols, Edinburgh: Edmonston & DouglasGoogle Scholar
Taylor, T 1925. The Life of St. Samson of Dol, Felinfach: Llanerch (1991 facsimile edn)Google Scholar
Tedeschi, C 2005. Congeries Lapidum. Iscrizioni britanniche dei secoli V–VII, 2 vols, Pisa: Scuola Normale SuperioreGoogle Scholar
Trigger, B G 1989. A History of Archaeological Thought, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Trigger, B G 1999. ‘Prehistoric Man and Daniel Wilson’s later Canadian ethnology’, in Ash et al 1999, 81–100Google Scholar
Wade-Evans, A W (ed and trans) 1944. Vitae Sanctorum Britanniae et Genealogiae, Cardiff: University of Wales PressGoogle Scholar
Wasserschleben, H (ed) 1885. Die irische Kanonensammlung, Leipzig: Nabu Press (1996 reprint)Google Scholar
Wilson, D 1841. ‘On the population of Scotland’, Report of the Tenth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, held at Glasgow in August 1840, 186Google Scholar
Wilson, D 1851a. ‘Inquiry into the evidence of the existence of primitive races in Scotland prior to the Celtae’, Report of the Twentieth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, held at Edinburgh in July and August 1850, pt 2, 142–6Google Scholar
Wilson, D 1851b. The Archæology and Prehistoric Annals of Scotland, Edinburgh: Sutherland and KnoxGoogle Scholar
Wilson, D 1863. Prehistoric Annals of Scotland, 2 vols, 2nd edn, London: MacmillanGoogle Scholar