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Curious numbers

It seems the builders of Cullerlie Stone Circle had a fascination with numbers. The monument features:

  • Eight standing stones

  • Eight ring cairns

  • 11 kerb stones around all but two ring cairns

  • 22 kerb stones around the largest ring cairn in the centre

The significance of these numbers is unclear, but it does suggest it was a deliberate design and may have had some spiritual meaning.

Side view of the stone circle in bright morning light, with large upright stones around several small cairns and an information panel visible in the foreground.
Close-up of an interpretive panel illustrating the layout of Cullerlie Stone Circle, showing cairns and stones marked in red and white, with explanatory text on the right.
Aerial view of Cullerlie Stone Circle in golden sunrise light, showing a ring of large standing stones surrounding smaller cairn mounds within a fenced grassy field.

A place for the dead

Cremation was a common practice in the Bronze Age, around 2000 BC. The largest cairn in the centre covered a pit containing large chunks of charcoal and some burnt human bone. Five of the rings also contained burnt human bone and charcoal. One scrap of pottery and three flints were also found.

Cullerlie is an unusual site, with few parallels. However it may be best regarded as a rare survival of what once may have been a type of monument common in the lowlands of north-east Scotland.

Statement of Significance

You can find out more about Cullerlie Stone Circle and the theories about its use by reading our Statement of Significance.

Read more
Aerial view of the stone circle in a frosty field, with the sun low on the horizon casting long shadows and a row of pylons and farm buildings in the background.

Discover more on trove.scot

See archive photographs of Cullerlie Stone Circle, plus archaeology notes and more on trove.scot. 

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