The Cultural Tutor Profile picture
Jul 19, 2024 25 tweets 9 min read Read on X
174 years ago there was a huge storm in northern Scotland, and it uncovered something strange.

From beneath the soil emerged a perfectly preserved village older than the Pyramids, and it even had furniture.

This is the 5,000 year old story of Skara Brae... Image
Orkney is the name of an archipelago just off the coast of northern Scotland.

It was here, in 1850, that a colossal storm partly destroyed a grassy hill by the sea.

When locals investigated they discovered that it had revealed what seemed to be walls made of large stones. Image
A local landowner and amateur archaeologist called William Watt started a proper dig, and after excavating four houses he brought in an expert called George Petrie.

By 1868 the importance of the discovery — which some claimed to have known about for years — was clear. Image
There were further studies done in 1913, but it wasn't until another storm in 1926 uncovered even more ruins that Skara Brae was properly excavated.

An archaeologist called V. Gordon Childe led the work there and wrote a book about his findings. Image
Childe thought Skara Brae was from the Iron Age, but in the 1970s — using radiocarbon dating — it was finally established as a Stone Age village.

People had lived here for about 500 years, from 3,100 BC to 2,500 BC.

A miraculous prehistoric survival. Image
There are ten structures in total, perhaps home to 100 people, who lived on livestock, crops, and seafood.

Inside each house is furniture, including beds and cabinets and chairs and fireplaces and toilets, all made from stone.

Rudimentary, but not unhomely. Image
The houses were built with slabs of unmortared red limestone and then artificially placed underground by surrounding them with large banks of "midden".

Midden is essentially refuse, whether shells and bones or broken pottery, mixed with ash and sand. Image
Each house was covered with a roof, likely of turf, and must have therefore been rather gloomy and smoke-filled inside.

Although, that being said, experts still cannot agree on what the inhabitants of Skara Brae actually burned in their fires. Image
These houses were then connected by covered and paved passageways.

The subterranean lifestyle was surely about keeping warm and dry during the long, cold, windy, wet, and harsh winters of Orkney. Image
The whole village was drained by a central sewer, and each house had its own toilet connected to the sewer.

This was hardly advanced sanitation — especially compared to contemporaneous cities in the Indus Valley, for example — but is impressive nonetheless. Image
Why was everything built from stone? Because there was a lack of trees and therefore wood on Orkney — they had no choice but to use stone.

It is essentially because of this fact that Skara Brae had been so well preserved; wooden structures would not have lasted so long. Image
What happened in the end? Nobody knows for sure.

Some have argued that the villagers fled because of natural disaster, whether a storm or flood.

Others argue it was abandoned gradually, eventually forgotten, and then naturally buried over the centuries.
What was life like there?

The fact that Skara Brae was built from stone means we have an incredibly precise portrait of ordinary, domestic life.

Like these cabinets, though whether they were used for preparing food or displaying objects is unclear. Image
That the villagers were forced to use stone (or other materials beyond wood) means countless artefacts have survived.

From mysterious carved balls (common around Scotland) to whalebone bowls and limestone figurines, plus dozens of fragments of patterned pottery. Image
But Skara Brae is not totally unique — Orkney is filled with Stone Age remains.

Like the Knap of Howar, a set of two stone houses in the far north of the archipelago which is even older than Skara Barae.

This was created in about 3,700 BC. Image
Closer to Skara Brae is the Ring of Brodgar.

It was made in about 2,500 BC, is over 100 metres in diameter, and was once composed of 60 separate standing stones.

Places like this have given rise to theories that Skara Brae was some form of religious or cult centre. Image
And nearby the Ring of Brodgar is the Ness of Brodgar, another village like Skara Brae but much less-well preserved.

One of its buildings, which has walls four metres thick, has been tentatively described as a temple — there is evidence of ritual animal slaughter here. Image
There's also Maeshowe, a colossal burial mound with an immense and impressively-constructed stone chamber at its centre. Image
Maeshowe is connected to Skara Brae by a road which passes the Ring of Brodgar and the Standing Stones of Stenness, below.

This was a society flourishing at the same time as those of Sumer, Egypt, and the Indus Valley, right at the dawn of human civilisation. Image
There are dozens more sites around Orkney (like the Unstan cairn, below) many of them yet unexcavated and surely even undiscovered.

Somehow, against the odds, the urban fabric of a Stone Age society has survived — by far the best preserved anywhere in northern Europe. Image
And so, taken together, these sites form a remarkable and eternally fascinating Stone Age community, an outcrop of early civilisation at the very edge of a continent, living in subterranean stone houses beneath furious winters — five and a half thousand years ago. Image
This part of Scotland is already an evocative and deeply atmospheric place — with low and treeless islands set against a huge sky and the endless grey of the North Sea.

Add to that these scattered and strange stone monuments, and it becomes a land of mystery and wonder. Image
And... who knows?

There is no reason to doubt that, one day, our modern megacities will crumble and melt away beneath the sands of time, and that archaeologists of the far future will discover the stumps of skyscrapers, contesting hotly what exactly they were for.
Just as we speculate about Skara Brae, still shrouded in mystery, future historians will speculate about us.

And maybe they'll get things wrong, as we have surely got things wrong about Skara Brae.

What would future generations make of the ruins of a place like Disney World? Image
And who knows what else is lying in wait, buried beneath just a few feet of sand or soil, waiting to be discovered?

In any case, that's the brief story of Skara Brae and the Stone Age society of Orkney — a place that lets us look at our 5,000 year old ancestors face to face. Image

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with The Cultural Tutor

The Cultural Tutor Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @culturaltutor

Jan 18
Urban design isn't magic — there are specific reasons why we like some places more than others.

So here are 10 ways to make a street more (or less) interesting... Image
1. Street Parking

Parked cars, however nice they look themselves, almost always make a street look less appealing and feel less inviting.

There are two broad reasons for this. Image
The first is aesthetic — no car, however good it looks, was designed to be in the place it happens to be parked, with those particular buildings.

So, rather than contributing to a street's appearance, a parked car is always aesthetically incohesive with its surroundings. Image
Read 25 tweets
Jan 14
In 1995 there were 820 skyscrapers in the world.

There are now more than 7,000 — and they're being built at a faster rate than ever... but why?

Well, here's a brief history (& future) of skyscrapers... Image
The history of skyscrapers can be divided into five broad eras.

First are ancient and medieval buildings which were tall, though not what we think of when we hear the word "skyscraper".

Like the Leaning Tower of Pisa, a belltower, completed in 1372 after two centuries' work: Image
It was the 19th century that ushered in a new architecture and introduced a new kind of building — the skyscraper.

Thanks to inventions like reinforced concrete and steel frames it became possible to construct buildings of immense size both more easily and more quickly. Image
Read 25 tweets
Jan 6
164 years ago today a Belgian designer called Victor Horta was born.

You probably haven't heard of him, but he was one of the most important architects in history.

Why? Because Horta created Art Nouveau... Image
Imagine yourself in the late 19th century.

All architecture is directly based on the past: everything is Neo-Classical, Neo-Gothic, Neo-Byzantine, Neo-Romanesque, Neo-Renaissance, and so on.

There is no original style unique to the age; everything is backwards looking. Image
There's nothing wrong with that in principle, but across Europe a new generation was growing dissatisfied.

They believed architecture had become conventionalised — it simply copied the past for the sake of it, rather than being genuinely inspired.

Change was coming...
Read 25 tweets
Jan 1
The year is now 2025 — but only according to one of the world's many different calendars.

So here's what the year is, right now, according to some of the others... Image
Gregorian Calendar: 2025

The world's most commonly used dating system. Introduced in 1582 by Pope Gregory XIII as a slight modification of the old Julian Calendar.

It dates history from the birth of Jesus Christ and has no "year zero" — 1 BC is followed by 1 AD.
Julian Calendar: 2024

The calendar created by Julius Caesar in 45 BC, adapted from the old Roman system and used for over 1,500 years.

It loses one day against the Gregorian Calendar every century or so, and is currently 13 days behind — hence it is still in 2024.
Read 22 tweets
Dec 29, 2024
One building from each year of the 21st century:

1. Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque, Muscat, Oman (2001) Image
2. Kingdom Centre, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia (2002)

Once the tallest building in Saudi Arabia (since surpassed), the Kingdom Centre is probably most interesting for containing the world's most elevated mosque — and, of course, its incredibly distinctive sky bridge. Image
3. Walt Disney Concert Hall, LA, USA (2003)

Among the most iconic buildings by one of the 20th & 21st century's most iconic architects, Frank Gehry, complete with his trademark flowing surfaces.

Some love Gehry and others can't stand him — but nobody has ever called him boring. Image
Read 24 tweets
Dec 26, 2024
It might feel like Christmas is now over — but it's only just started.

Because Christmas really begins on the 25th December and ends on the 5th January.

That's why there are Twelve Days of Christmas... Image
The way Christmas is now celebrated makes the 25th December feel like its end and culmination.

But originally — and as remains the case religiously — the 25th December was the beginning of Christmas, not its end, as declared by the Council of Tours in 567 AD.
The period leading up to Christmas is known as "Advent", defined by the Council of Tours as a season of preparation.

Hence Advent Calendars, which first appeared in the 19th century.

They count down the days until the whole Christmas season begins, not simply to Christmas Day. Image
Read 14 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(