Picts in literature and popular culture explained

The Picts, the pre-Gaelic people of eastern Scotland, have frequently been represented in literature and popular culture.

Visual arts

Thematic Pictish history and imagery has been appropriated by multiple contemporary fine artists, most notably American ex-pat Marianna Lines,[1] [2] [3] British artists Lisa Wright[4] [5] and Jon Hodgson,[6] as well as American artist F. Lennox Campello.[7] [8] [9]

Fairies and Picts

David MacRitchie was an outspoken proponent of the euhemeristic origin of fairies being the folk memory of Picts.[10] [11] He argued they were rooted in a real diminutive or pygmy-statured indigenous population that lived during the late Stone Age across the British Isles, especially Scotland:

MacRitchie developed what became known as the "Pygmy-Pict theory" in his The Testimony of Tradition (1890) and Fians, Fairies and Picts (1893) regarding fairies to have been folk memories of the aboriginal Picts who in his view were of very small size, pointing to findings of short doors (3 – 4 ft in height) of chambers, underground dwellings, long barrows, as well as quoting old literature such as Adam of Bremen's Historia Norwegiæ which describe the Picts of Orkney as "only a little exceeding pygmies in stature". The folklorist John Francis Campbell, who MacRitchie cited, had also written in his Popular Tales of the West Highlands (1860–62):

Robert Louis Stevenson described so the Picts in his Heather Ale poem:

Rudely plucked from their hiding, Never a word they spoke:A son and his aged father— Last of the dwarfish folk.
Modern archaeological studies demonstrate that the Picts were not significantly different in height from the present-day occupants of Scotland.

Examples

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alex. Michael. 25 March 2017. Meet Pictish art enthusiast Marianna Lines. 2020-08-27. The Courier. en-GB.
  2. Web site: Renton. Jennie. Marianna Lines : Textualities. 2020-08-27. Textualities.
  3. Web site: P&J reporter. A traveller's guide to sacred Scotland. 2020-08-27. Press and Journal. 24 April 2015 . en-US.
  4. Web site: Aesthetica Magazine - Q+A with Painter, Lisa Wright. 2020-08-27. Aesthetica Magazine. en-GB.
  5. Web site: Lisa Wright Descendant of the Picts (2015). 2020-08-27. www.artsy.net. en.
  6. Web site: Lamley. Hamish. 2020-05-23. The Picts, When and Where. A Timeline.. 2020-08-27. Pictavia Leather. en.
  7. Web site: The Obsessions of F. Lennox Campello CL. 2020-08-27. Washington City Paper. en.
  8. Web site: The Obsessions of F. Lennox Campello at Artists and Makers Studios 2 East City Art. 2020-08-27. www.eastcityart.com. 7 June 2017 .
  9. Web site: F. Lennox Campello: Pictish Nation Drawings - The Washington Times Review of the 2004 F. Lennox Campello Show at the Fraser Gallery. 2020-08-27. www.thefrasergallery.com.
  10. Macculloch, 1932: "The origin of fairies in a small race of men [though it should be remembered that all fairies are not small] was strongly advocated in more recent times by Mr. David MacRitchie."
  11. Silver, 1986; 1998: 47-48.
  12. Burke, Rusty, and Louinet, Patrice, "Robert E. Howard, Bran Mak Morn and the Picts" in Robert E. Howard, Bran Mak Morn: The Last King. New York, Del Rey, 2005. (p.343-360)
  13. http://www.julietmarillier.com/books/brideihistoricalnotes.html The Official Site | Bridei Series
  14. http://www.nancyfarmerwebsite.com/trolls-trilogy.html Trolls Trilogy - Nancy Farmer's official home page
  15. Book: Turnbull, Gael . An Irish Monk on Lindisfarne . While Breath Persist . 12ff . 0-88984-133-0 . 1992 . The Porcupine's Quill, Inc. . Erin, Ontario . registration .
  16. Turnbull, Gael. "An Irish Monk on Lindisfarne" (misspelled on Web page) read by Gael Turnbull. Audio recording. Recorded in Geneva by Peter McCarey. Accessed 2013-04-09.
  17. Book: Freiert, Jeff. Best New Writing 2008. 2008. Hopewell Publications. 9781933435268. 195.