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This tomb slab is carved with a shield bearing a stag's head with a star between the antlers.
Object number ELG/ts/7
A voussoir is a wedge shaped stone used in the building of an arch or a vault.
Object number ELG/v/4
This carving is extrememely lifelike.
Object number ELG/vb/12
This carving of a man’s head has surely been styled on someone real.
Object number ELG/vb/13
Teeth bared and tongue sticking out, this expressive face breaks all the rules.
Object number ELG/vb/14
Although extremely lifelike, this carving seems to be half-man, half-lion.
Object number ELG/vb/15
With his brow furrowed and mouth open wide, this grimacing man looks like he’s crying out in anger.
Object number ELG/vb/16
This stone is carved with the face of a dog.
Object number ELG/vb/20
This lifelike carving is thought to be a woman, dressed in a widow’s barbe (worn around the head and neck).
Object number ELG/vb/6
A socket at one end of this Pictish stone once supported a vertical cross, that stood at Meigle, Angus.
Object number MEIG026
Fragment of a medieval bone ring.
Object number MEL337
The uneven punched pattern on this thimble suggests that it was handmade some time before 1620.
Object number CAER160
This heart shaped charm was found in a stone coffin located in the Chapter House at St Andrews Cathedral in 1904.
Object number SAC344
This unusually decorated medieval floor tile is believed to be from Blackfriars church in St Andrews, the remains of which survive just off of South Street in town.
Object number SAC422
This rectangular cross slab was probably the first sculptured stone at Meigle, Angus.
Object number MEIG001
Unicorn carving from the the King's Fountain, Linlithgow Palace.
Object number LLP/o/23
Two fragments of dressed slab of Carsaig sandstone.
Object number IONA031
The form of this cross suggests that it was carved in the early 600s soon after the death of St Columba.
Object number IONA022
The Latin inscription on this stone reads 'a prayer for the soul of Éogan'.
Object number IONA045
Inscribed ‘A prayer for the soul of Flann’, this may commemorate Flann mac Maíle-dúin, an abbot of Iona who died in 891.In three fragments.
Object number IONA046