Pitcorthie, Dunfermline, Fife

Standing Stone:  OS Grid Reference – NT 11389 86318

Also Known as:

  1. Easter Pitcorthie

Getting Here

Pitcorthie standing stone

If you’re coming south out of Dunfermline, or north towards Dunfermline, make sure you go along the A823 Queensferry Road.  About a mile short of the town centre you need to turn east along the B916 Aberdour Road.  Nearly 1 mile along here, shortly past the Tesco supermarket, turn left along Tweeddale Drive.  About 50 yards down here, turn left again along Walls Place.  About 120 yards along you’ll find a small ginnel/path that runs between two rows of flats on the council estate.  Walk down here for a short distance and the stone will magically appear on your right.

Archaeology & History

This is a bit of an odd one!  Early accounts of the monolith are scarce and, on my first visit here, I was somewhat sceptical of its prehistoric provenance.  To be honest, I still am.  The erosion levels on the stone give the impression that it’s a much more recent erection (calm down… 😉 ), almost as if it was only quarried a century or two ago.  Anyhow, that aside.  It’s a nice bulky standing stone, nearly six feet tall and erected where the rising land levels out in the middle of the modern housing estate.  It was included in the Royal Commission (1933) survey, who said of it:

Pitcorthie, looking SW
Pitcorthie, looking West

“About 200 yards north of the farm of Easter Pitcorthie, in a field adjoining the north side of the roadway from Dunfermline to Burntisland, stands a roughly rectangular block of sandstone, which presents the appearance of having been subjected to fire or heat.  It is set with its main axis due north and south on the crest of slightly rising ground… There are some indications that it has been packed at the base, but what appears to be packing may be no more than a collection of loose stones which have accumulated round it during the years in which the surrounding area has been cultivated. It rises to a height of 5 feet 10 inches above the ground level, but shows no traces of any sculpturings.  At 3 feet from the ground its girth if 11 feet 10 inches.”

It would be good if there were other prehistoric remains close by that could erode my slight scepticism about its age, but I think the nearest other Bronze Age monument is the cairn more than half-a-mile to the south-east.

References:

  1. Royal Commission on the Ancient & Historical Monuments, Scotland, Inventory of Monuments and Constructions in the Counties of Fife, Kinross and Clackmannan, HMSO: Edinburgh 1933.
  2. Swarbrick, Olaf, A Gazetteer of Prehistoric Standing Stones in Great Britain, BAR: Oxford 2012.

© Paul BennettThe Northern Antiquarian

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