Analyzes the cultural and environmental landscapes of north-east Scotland through collaborative research, blending archaeology, geology, and community engagement.
The authors explore multi-faceted aspects of the competing cultural landscapes that comprise the north-east of Scotland. This inter-disciplinary collection uses a deep temporal perspective at a range of scales, from micro-landscape studies to large-scale geological and archaeological environments. It presents collaborative research carried out by a local conservation group, the Bailies of Bennachie, and the University of Aberdeen across a twelve-year period – the ‘Bennachie Landscapes Project’.
Far from being a cultural backwater, the book shows how key physical and social processes have interacted in the landscape of north-east Scotland since prehistory. Authors present new understandings of glacial geology, Mesolithic settlements, Roman, Viking and medieval settlements and environments, and recent crofting landscapes. Today’s landscape is shown to be an extraordinarily rich resource for cultural and environmental history that is well worthy of continued protection and care. The research is itself used as a means of reaching into the wider community and engaging in a two-way process of education that connects the various participants.
This book, therefore, explores ways of ‘doing’ environmental archaeology and cultural landscape studies that are not mainstream. All of the studies have a greater or lesser degree of community input. Some are community-driven, others more academically oriented. But all add value to the others and help to create a better understanding of the cultural landscapes of north-east Scotland. The narrative flows from late glacial times, through prehistoric and historic periods forward, through the actions of the present engaging communities, seamlessly on and into the future.
List of corresponding authors
List of figures
List of tables
List of plates
Foreword
Colin Shepherd
Part One
1. Introducing the cultural landscapes of north-east Scotland
Bruce Mann
2. A major glacial lake in north-east Scotland
Andrew Wainwright
3. Beyond the north-western frontiers of the Roman Empire: exploring the impacts of the Romans on farming communities in north-eastern Scotland
Samantha Jones and Gordon Noble
4. Identifying early medieval secular and ecclesiastical landscapes of power and community around Rhynie and Burghead
Nicholas Evans
5. ‘The banchor of Kildrummy’: a forgotten religious landscape?
Alexander Forbes
6. North-eastern Vikings? The presence and absence of a Norse–Scottish cultural landscape in north-east Scotland
Charlotta Hillerdal
7. Trodden paths: Fetternear bishop’s palace and its landscape in medieval times
Penelope Dransart
8. Land for the landless: squatter encroachment in the uplands
Jeff Oliver
9. Exploring the effects of post-medieval crofting on the modern hillside ecosystem: vegetation history as cultural legacy
Louise Smith, Jeff Oliver, Gill Plunkett, Kate Britton, and J. Edward Schofield
Part Two
10. When the ice goes, the river flows: evidence of Mesolithic settlement from Deeside and the north-east
Sandra Davison
11. The Shepherds Lodge kailyard: experiments in reconstructing a 19th-century upland rural garden
Christine Foster
12. ‘Colonising the margins’: excavation and environmental analysis within a late medieval settlement area on the Pittodrie estate
Colin Shepherd and Iain Ralston, with contributions from Jackaline Robertson, J. Edward Schofield, and Tim Kinnaird
13. Thirteen years on: the Bennachie Landscapes Project experience. Learning from the past, shaping the future
Colin Shepherd and Jo Vergunst