Saturday, July 19, 2008
What Does This Stone Really Mean???
Vacation has begun. Posts until 7/28 will be sporadic.
From the Liverpooldailypost.co.uk
Academics ponder riddle of church’s ancient stone
By Liam Murphy
July 19, 2008
(There is a photograph of part of the "stone" but I'm not going to use up valuable bandwidth publishing it here, it does not show anything!)
AN ANCIENT Viking burial stone kept in a south Wirral church has become the centre of an archaeological dispute.
The stone at the Church of St Mary and St Helen, in Neston town centre, which has been broken over time prior to its discovery, clearly depicts a man and a woman with an angel flying overhead.
Archaeologist and TV presenter Mark Olly said the stone is “as unique as the death mask of Tutankhamun”, but has disputed the interpretation placed on it by other Viking experts.
The stone depicts a warrior and a woman who – say orthodox archaeological interpretations – are a couple, with the stone possibly marking their joint burial site.
But Mr Olly insists the woman depicted on the ornately carved stone is actually a Valkyrie, which would make this already unique artefact even more intriguing.
The stone itself has had a chequered history, having been used as a lintel in the church in the 1980s, and eventually recovered and put on display.
The top portion of the stone has been broken off at some time, taking with it key parts of the carving.
Mr Olly said: “This stone shows the story of a Viking’s life, you see him with a spear, deer hunting, and it could also be the oldest depiction of jousting.
“I think it shows a warrior and he is dying. When you look at the other carved characters, they are all men.”
This view is disputed by other scholars who see this particular part of the imagery on the stone as a wife beckoning her husband.
Wirral Viking specialist Professor Stephen Harding prefers the view that the stone is already fascinating for a number of reasons.
He emphasises that he and the other members of the research team working on the cross, Dr Martin Cooper of National Museums Liverpool, Dr Roger White, Academic Director of the Ironbridge Institute in Shropshire and Dr Peter Rossiter believe the Viking couple are the deceased man and wife whom the cross is commemorating.
In a bid to come to a conclusion over the real meaning of the stone, it has been scanned by experts from NML and an animation shows it being attached to what could be the missing portion.
The scanning process also means the rock could be recreated – in stone or some other substance, depending on cost – and used as a tourist attraction for Neston and the church.
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