Here you can find the resources we are developing for the journey. Many of these are linked to the smartphone app.
15 resources were found:
Historical information about the Mans Stane at Knowe of Lingro
Historical information about the Mans Stane at Knowes of Lingro
Historical information about the Mans Stanes at Northside in Birsay
Historical information about the Mans Stanes at Northside in Birsay
Audio recording of historical information about Kingshouse, Harray, where an unknown mound (visible to the southeast of North Bigging) is traditionally associated with a resting place of St Magnus.
VIew of the Knowes of Conyar from the Old Drover's Track
Audio recording of historical information about St Michael's Kirk in Harray.
Audio recording of historical information about Appiehouse as a possible resting point.
There is a rich Magnus tradition associated with an 8ft high standing stone on the top of Stoney Hill in Harray. This prehistoric stone, is the only remaining stone from a stone circle that once dominated the skyline.
There are two places in the south corner of Harray which have been suggested as resting places of Magnus: A mound called Howinawheel on the land of Winksetter and a stone at or near The Refuge. There is about a mile distance between these two places and the traditions for both rely on place-name evidence.
The first Magnus resting place in Firth was thought to be a mound ‘somewhat to the west of Finstown with a standing stone on top’.
An interesting tradition concerning a Mans Stane in the heart of Finstown.
The name Whilcoe, now Quilco and the name of a housing estate, referred at the end of the nineteenth century to a boundary stone marking the three parishes of Birsay, Harray and Sandwick.
There are various traditions associated with the transportation of that Magnus’s shrine through the parish of Harray on the way from Birsay to Kirkwall.
A photograph of the Mans Stane at Strathyre.