Bennachie / Mither Tap

My very last visit was to the Mother Mountain herself, a stupendous granite giant on whose summit was build the most audacious hillfort of them all. As I ascended I put together all of the evidence and impressions I had made during my trip. More of that later. One thing I did notice was how the peaks of Bennachie could have been repeated in the symbolism of the flankers and the "dual crescent" motif of the Picts. Of course, the symbolism would not have been limited to something as limited as a mountain peak, but there is resonance with the peaks of this "Kingdom".

From the high plateau of Bannachie, looking towards the Mither Tap hillfort

Looking West from Mither Tap hillfort

The terrifying fortress entrance

Looking up to the 582m trig point from a foreboding fortress gate

'd like to share my conclusions with you. While they may not be earth shaking I do feel there could be mileage in me developing these with some sort of essay / publication, so I'd be grateful if you could "keep mum" regarding sharing these views, for now (and that includes mum). Yours narcissisticly, Matt. PS ROCK ON!!!

This mountain is no more or less sacred than the piece of earth beneath your feet. To decree something sacred is to begin censorship, and nothing is censored.

The hills do however convey meaning, and in the context of the neolithic I suggest this is pre-linguistic meaning, formed when people discovered meaning itself, when two worlds parted. The old world of nature, and the new world of human civilisation.

I have come to understand the symbolism of the recumbent stone circle, through living and breathing these monuments. They were built when mankind was at a fissure between two worlds. With new found confidence in subsistence agriculture as a means of survival, shaping the landscape and growing his kind, man saw the world split apart. He saw that without nature, he was nothing, but without his intellect and resourcefulness he was no more than a hunter. He saw that the natural world and the human world were connected; by fire, earth, water and air. Man could see it coming; too fast; too soon. Man's world was about to overtake the natural world.

A body of thought; or perhaps a growing realisation; coalesced around this epoch defining moment. Perhaps it was conceived first by a philosopher, or equally it could have been felt by communities simultaneously articulating the sense and meaning of standing between these two worlds.

Stone circles were built as monuments to this very moment. The body of thought became a belief system, and with it the spread of practices that articulated meaning.

A circle, connected with itself inexorably, infinitely. Stones, solitary, standing. The recumbent stone - the truth; the universe; the flankers - the two worlds.