Douglas Terrace, Cambusbarron, Stirlingshire
Posted by megalithix on June 20, 2009
Cairn (destroyed): OS Grid Reference – NS 782 929
Archaeology & History
At the bottom of the ridge from the (supposedly) singular King’s Park cup-and-ring stone,”in a sand-pit adjoining Douglas Terrace,” we could once find the remains of a now lost prehistoric tomb. First described in the Stirling Natural History Society’s Transactions in 1907, the Scottish Royal Commission lads (1963) told us that, “an urn from this cist was taken to the Smith Institue, Stirling, in a broken condition.” Anymore information about this site, or images of the fragmented urn, would be hugely appreciated.
It does seem very probable that the King’s Park cup-and-ring stone at the top of the ridge from here did relate to local neolithic or Bronze Age burial sites, as I suspected. It’s highly likely that other carvings were (are?) hidden beneath, or round the edges of this Douglas Terrace and Kings Park region, as I suggested a few months ago. It’s imperative that archaeologists in the district pay attention to this area before giving the go-ahead of any further landscape destruction. (Huge thanx to Paddybhoy for prodding my attention here.)
References:
Royal Commission on Ancient & Historical Monuments, Scotland, Stirlingshire – volume 1, HMSO: Edinburgh 1963.
This entry was posted on June 20, 2009 at 11:09 pm and is filed under Cairns, Tombs, Tumuli, Stirlingshire. Tagged: antiquities, Archaeology, Bronze Age, burial, cairns, Cambusbarron, cist, death, prehistoric sites, Scotland, Scottish, Stirling, tombs, tumulus. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.