Imagine standing in a field in Angus, face to face with a stone slab carved more than a thousand years ago. The surface carries a cluster of symbols: a crescent with strange geometric flourishes, a serpent with a knotted body, a creature that looks like nothing that has ever lived on this earth. And here is what makes it truly extraordinary — not a single scholar alive can tell you with certainty what any of it means.

Who Were the Picts?
The Picts were the dominant people of northern and eastern Scotland for roughly six centuries, from around 300 to 900 AD. The Romans named them — Picti, meaning “the painted ones” — likely for the tattoos or war paint they wore in battle.
They were formidable. They repelled Roman incursions. They built impressive fortifications and created elaborate metalwork, and they clearly had a sophisticated culture with a shared system of symbols.
But they left no written language that anyone has ever decoded. No saga, no chronicle, no readable inscription. What they left instead were the stones.
A Shared Visual Language
Before asking what the symbols mean, it helps to understand what they look like. The Picts used a defined set of images that appear again and again across hundreds of surviving stones.
There is the double disc and Z-rod — two circles connected by a diagonal bar, surrounded by spirals. The crescent and V-rod, elegant and precise. Mirror and comb symbols that appear frequently on stones interpreted as women’s memorials. And then there is the Pictish beast — a creature that appears more often than any other symbol, and that still defies identification.
What strikes scholars is the consistency. These weren’t rough scratchings. Pictish artists were skilled craftspeople, and the same symbols were executed with care from Shetland to Stirling.
What Do the Symbols Actually Mean?
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That is the question scholars have wrestled with for two centuries. The honest answer is: nobody knows for certain.
The symbols appear in consistent combinations — particular shapes paired with other particular shapes — which strongly implies intentional meaning. Some researchers believe they mark lineage or clan identity, similar to a heraldic device. Others think they commemorate alliances or the dead. A few argue they represent a cosmological system that simply hasn’t been cracked.
What deepens the mystery is that the Picts had no neighbouring culture that used similar symbols. They invented this visual vocabulary themselves. And then, gradually, they stopped using it.
The Pictish Beast: Scotland’s Original Mystery Creature
Of all the symbols, the Pictish beast is the most haunting. It resembles an elongated creature with a beak or snout, curled limbs, and a spiral tail — unlike any real animal. Some scholars see a dolphin; others a dragon; others still an elephant or walrus filtered through rumour and distant report.
It appears on more Pictish stones than almost any other symbol, which implies it held great cultural importance. But what it signified — a clan emblem, a deity, a spiritual guardian — remains entirely open.
Scotland’s Loch Ness monster legend can be traced to a 7th-century account of a creature in the loch. The Picts lived in that same northern landscape, carving mysterious beasts onto stone for generations. Whether any connection exists between the two traditions is speculation — but the thread is there, if you want to pull it.
Where to Find Pictish Stones Today
You don’t have to search hard. The Meigle Sculptured Stone Museum in Perthshire holds one of the finest collections — 26 stones gathered from the surrounding area, including elaborate slabs that blend Pictish symbols with early Christian imagery in a way that shows a culture in transition.
The Aberlemno Stones in Angus stand roadside and in the churchyard, open to the sky the way they have stood for over a thousand years. Sueno’s Stone in Forres is the tallest Pictish monument at nearly six and a half metres, now protected inside a glass enclosure.
If you’re drawn to Scotland’s ancient stone heritage, you might also explore why Scotland’s most mysterious stone circle comes alive in the moonlight, or discover why Scotland has so many standing stones scattered across its glens.
A People Who Became Scotland
The Picts didn’t vanish in any dramatic sense. Around 843 AD, under Kenneth MacAlpin, the Pictish and Scottish kingdoms merged to form the Kingdom of Alba — the foundation of modern Scotland. The Picts weren’t destroyed; they became Scottish.
Their symbols went quiet. The stone-carving tradition faded. The language — whatever it sounded like — dissolved into history without leaving enough behind to decipher.
What remains are the stones. Hundreds of them, scattered across the country they helped build. Patient, weathered, and still waiting. For more of Scotland’s hidden history and lesser-known corners, lovetovisitscotland.com is worth bookmarking — stories like this one appear throughout the week.
There is something quietly moving about standing in front of a Pictish stone on a clear morning. These weren’t monuments in any language we recognise. They were something else entirely — a vocabulary carved in stone that outlasted the people who spoke it. Stand face to face with one, and you will feel the gap across the centuries close, just slightly. That feeling may be the closest any of us will ever come to reading them.
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