The Knowe of Yarsoe is a stalled cairn
on the island of Rousay in Orkney. Like the majority of the cairns in Orkney,
it was built in the early Neolithic period and continued in use for over a
thousand years. It stands on the edge of a steep slope which falls away sharply
towards the sea, the focus for many Orkney tombs.
Unlike the chambered cairns such as Cuween
on Mainland Orkney, the stalled cairns comprise a long, narrow chamber
subdivided by stone slabs into sections, resembling cattle stalls, where the
bones of the deceased were laid. It is believed the two cairn types represent
two distinct but interconnected cultures living in Orkney during the Neolithic period.
This tomb contains four consecutive stalls,
and perhaps represents a continuing ritual descent into the spirit world from
the earthly world. The innermost stall is partly blocked by stone slabs.
The Knowe of Yarsoe contained the disarticulated
remains of around 29 people, dating from 2900-1900BC. All were adults and many
more skulls were found than other remains. Orkney tombs typically contained several
hundred bodies, adults and children, and many were ritually sealed and/or
emptied at the end of the Neolithic period, around 2500BC. The bodies in this tomb
may be those associated with the closure rite after the rest of the community’s
ancestors were removed elsewhere.
The dates indicate that these weren’t the last people to die. They may have been especially powerful or revered people whose remains (or perhaps their skulls) had been curated in a tomb or in a house for several hundred years before being placed here, perhaps as guardians of the land or the tomb. Many tombs have legends of ghostly guardians who bring calamity on anyone who disturbs them. Some may have been added long after Orkney’s Neolithic culture had collapsed.
The dates indicate that these weren’t the last people to die. They may have been especially powerful or revered people whose remains (or perhaps their skulls) had been curated in a tomb or in a house for several hundred years before being placed here, perhaps as guardians of the land or the tomb. Many tombs have legends of ghostly guardians who bring calamity on anyone who disturbs them. Some may have been added long after Orkney’s Neolithic culture had collapsed.
The entrance of the Knowe of Yarsoe faces
southeast, along the line of the hillside, on the long axis of the tomb. This
is typical of stalled cairns and a major difference to chambered tombs which
generally face out to sea. The communities linked to these tombs may have had
little affinity to the sea compared with the people who built the chambered
cairns.
Red deer. Massimo Catarinella,
Wikicommons
Many tombs are linked to specific
animals or birds which were interred with the human bodies. These include sea eagles, dogs and otters. The Knowe of Yarsoe contained the
remains of at least 34 red deer. Red deer remains are commonly found in stalled
cairns but not in chambered cairns, another indication of a cultural divide. The
deer was a revered animal, both for its gifts of meat, hide and antler and for
its embodiment of the spirit of the wilds. The shedding and regrowth of antlers
reflects the dying-and-rising spirit of the green and the deer remained a totem
or spirit guide for shamans and ritual specialists throughout the Celtic and
Anglo-Saxon periods. The horned God Cernunnos and the sage Merlin were both
associated with deer.
Cernunnos on the Gundestrup Cauldron, 1st
Century BC.
Rousay is rugged with steep hillsides
and heather moorland, ideal habitat for red deer, which were probably
introduced to the islands by people at a very early point in Orkney’s history.
Rousay is poor quality land and unsuitable for cultivation, and this offers the
idea that the stalled cairns were linked to the earliest hunter-gatherer communities
of Orkney, who especially revered the deer, whereas the Neolithic farmers who
settled in later times and have proven Middle Eastern ancestry lived on the better
quality land more suited to agriculture, built the chambered cairns and the
various ritual monuments including the Stones of Stenness and the Ring of Brodgar, and brought Orkney into the forefront of British culture.
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