A Little Scottish Ditty

Digs & Discoveries July/August 2012

SHARE:



(Courtesy Historic Scotland Crown Copyright)

Thousands of years before the first bagpipe was ever played in the Scottish highlands, a prehistoric musician on the remote Isle of Skye played a type of lyre. During excavations at High Pasture Cave, which contains evidence for 800 years of human activity between the Late Bronze and Iron Ages, archaeologists discovered the wooden remains of what they believe is the bridge of the earliest stringed instrument ever found in Europe. According to archaeomusicologist Graeme Lawson of the University of Cambridge, the find "pushes the history of complex music [in western Europe] back more than 1,000 years."

  • Features July/August 2012

    Tomb of the Chantress

    A newly discovered burial chamber in the Valley of the Kings provides a rare glimpse into the life of an ancient Egyptian singer

    Read Article
    (Courtesy © University of Basel Kings' Valley Project)
  • Features July/August 2012

    London 2012

    Archaeology and the Olympics

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Olympic Delivery Authority)
  • London 2012 July/August 2012

    London's Battlefield

    London Olympic Park

    Read Article
    (Courtesy The Museum of London and Pre-Construct Archaeology)
  • London 2012 July/August 2012

    An Early Industrial Estate

    Excavating Temple Mills

    Read Article
    (Courtesy The Museum of London and Pre-Construct Archaeology)