‘Remarkable’ Pictish ring is discovered after 1,000 years: Kite-shaped band with a garnet at the centre is uncovered at Burghead Fort in Moray

A ‘remarkable’ Pictish ring has discovered at Scotland’s largest Pictish settlement after 1,000 years.

The kite-shaped ring with a garnet or red glᴀss centre had laid undiscovered at the Burghead Fort in Moray, Scotland.

A 'remarkable' Pictish ring has discovered at Scotland's largest Pictish settlement after 1,000 years

The area was thought to have been ‘archaeologically vandalised’ in the 1800s when a town was built on top of it.

Its historical value was ᴀssumed to have been lost when Burghead was constructed – covering over much of the fort and dismantling the stone that remained for building.

The kite-shaped ring with a garnet or red glᴀss centre had laid undiscovered at the Burghead fort in Moray, Scotland

But now the historic ring has been uncovered in a dig led by the University of Aberdeen – and found by a volunteer whose ancestors moved to the town.

Among the families encouraged to relocate to the new town to support the fishing industry were the ancestors of John Ralph.

The historic ring has been uncovered in a dig led by the University of Aberdeen - and found by a volunteer whose ancestors moved to the town

He is a former engineer and graduate of the University of Aberdeen who has enjoyed a 50-year ᴀssociation with his alma mater.

When he retired, John signed up as a volunteer for the Burghead digs after seeing a social media post by the University’s Professor of Archaeology, Gordon Noble.

Burghead Fort is on the coast of Moray, and was once the largest Pictish settlement in Scotland

Professor Noble has led excavation work, funded by Historical Environment Scotland, over the last three years which has shed new light on the importance of the site and enabled the development of 3-D reconstructions of how it might once have looked.

Among the families encouraged to relocate to the new town to support the fishing industry were the ancestors of John Ralph (pictured)
Destroyed by fire after 500 years of occupation: The story of Burghead Fort

After some 500 years of continuous occupation, Burghead Fort was destroyed by fire in the 10th century.

It is possible that the inferno was set by Vikings — who were known to have raided the Moray coast in this period.

After the fire, the site remained unoccupied until the 12th century.

Its historical value was ᴀssumed to have been lost when Burghead was constructed - covering over much of the fort and dismantling the stone that remained for building

When the modern harbour was constructed in the 19th century, the landward ramparts and part of the seaward defences were levelled.

During this work, 30 Pictish carved stones were uncovered from the fort site, but only six carved bulls and some fragments of early Christian sculpture ultimately ended up surviving.

Professor Noble said: 'We will now look at the ring, evidence of buildings and other artefacts to consider whether the ring was crafted on the site and who such an important piece of jewellery might have been made for'

John, who describes himself as an ‘enthusiastic amateur’ had many moments over the two-week excavation – his third dig at the site – where he thought he had discovered something, only to for the experts to tell him he had a knack for finding ‘shiny pebbles’.

So when, on the last day of the final dig, he found something that looked interesting, he didn’t hold out much hope.

It was only when he showed it to a fellow volunteer and his eyes lit up that he realised he might ‘have something’.

Professor Noble says that what he was presented with was ‘truly remarkable’.

After some 500 years of continuous occupation, Burghead Fort was destroyed by fire in the 10th century (artist's impression)

‘John was digging and then came over and said “look what I’ve found”. What he handed over was incredible,’ he added.

‘Even before the conservation work we could see it was something really exciting as despite more than a thousand years in the ground we could see glints of the possible garnet setting.

Back in 2021, researchers brought Burghead Fort back to its former glory in an incredible digital recreation

‘There are very few Pictish rings which have ever been discovered and those we do know about usually come from hoards which were placed in the ground deliberately for safekeeping in some way.

‘We certainly weren’t expecting to find something like this lying around the floor of what was once a house but that had appeared of low significance so, in typical fashion, we had left work on it until the final day of the dig.’

Related Posts

The Willamette Meteorite: A Celestial Visitor from Deep Time

Resting within the halls of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, the mᴀssive iron mᴀss known as the Willamette Meteorite stands as one…

Echoes Beneath the Ash: The Skeletons of Herculaneum and the Day the World Stood Still

In the shadow of Mount Vesuvius, along the Bay of Naples in southern Italy, lies the ancient Roman city of Herculaneum. Founded around the 6th century BCE,…

The Anunnaki Enigma – Between Myth, Memory, and the Origins of Humanity

Among the oldest stories carved into the stone of Mesopotamia lies a tale that refuses to fade — the story of the Anunnaki, the “gods who came…

The Weaver of Eternity – The Paracas Mummy of Peru

From the arid sands of the Peruvian coast emerges one of humanity’s most haunting and exquisite echoes: a Paracas mummy, wrapped in centuries of silence and still…

The Eternal Rest – Secrets of an Egyptian Mummy from the Ptolemaic Period

Encased behind the pristine glᴀss of a museum display, the figure in this pH๏τograph lies silent yet commanding — a mummy, bound in the ritual elegance of…

The Return of the Gods – Unearthing the Marble Faces of Aizanoi

In the autumn of 2022, deep within the ancient city of Aizanoi in western Turkey, a team of archaeologists uncovered fragments of marble statues that had not…