Diary: Val McDermid, Deep Winter

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Summary

Midwinter solstice at the Clava Cairns, Scotland. Photograph 漏 Julian ParenThe winter solstice arrives just before Christmas, on the 21/22 December. It marks the turning of the year and that same promise鈥攖he light will come back.It鈥檚 an understanding humans have needed for thousands of years. If we want proof of that then it鈥檚 there in physical form in the layout of the many prehistoric stone circles in the Scottish Highlands and islands. A classic example sits on a terrace above the River Nairn near Inverness. About a mile south of the desolate Culloden battlefield, where Bonnie Prince Charlie鈥檚 army was famously routed in 1746, hidden in a grove of trees is the Clava Cairns. Viewers of the TV series Outlander will recognize their more recent rebranding as Craigh Na Dun. But they had already been standing there for the best part of four thousand years before that decisive April defeat of the Highland army.Walking through the trees, you come upon the chambered tombs almost by surprise. The scale is almost shocking: the main cairn consists of a wide outer ring of stones more than twenty meters in diameter, encircling a central space five meters across. It鈥檚 impossible not to be struck by the atmosphere鈥攖he air seems still, untouched by the winds that sweep across Culloden moor from the nearby Moray Firth. The structures feel alien, almost as if they鈥檇 dropped from space.Back in the Bronze Age, these stone tombs were painstakingly built by people who had no mechanical assistance and only rudimentary tools, a remarkable feat in itself. The circular cairns sit on a raised earth platform amid strategically placed standing stones, some almost three meters tall. The cairns themselves are aligned along a southwest/northeast axis; when the sun sets on the midwinter solstice, its rays shine down the passageway into the heart of the tomb itself and illuminate the back of the chamber. It鈥檚 an awesome feat.And the builders didn鈥檛 just assemble the cairns from a random collection...

First seen: 2025-12-23 16:42

Last seen: 2025-12-23 17:42