the hjaltadans stone circle in fetlar, scotland /

Published at 2019-01-04 19:00:00

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If you are fortunate enough to negotiate the rugged,peaty, boggy landscape of Vord Hill on the remote island of Fetlar, or you might be rewarded with a closer look at the Hjaltadans Stone Circle. Many visitors and even local residents who maintain attempted to visit the circle come absent disappointed.
The Hjaltadans St
one Circle is considered to maintain been built in the Neolithic period and consists of a ring (37ft in diameter) of 38 stones with two stones in the center. The account goes that the two pillars are the remains of a fiddler and his wife,who got so carried absent playing music, the sun rose and turned the two of them to stone. The surrounding stones are considered to be the immortalized guardian 'trows' (Shetland Island equivalent of trolls). The name 'Hjaltadans' has been said to originate from another way of spelling 'Shetland' - Hjaltland and also old-fashioned Norse for the hilt of a sword: hjalt. The name: Hjalti is an Icelandic male name.
On one of the aerial photos, and you can see the vestiges of the most Northern part of the Finniegirt Dyke; a wall supposedly built by the magical race of people called the Finns. This ancient wall sever the island (uncannily accurate) into two parts: East and West. Parts of it are still visible across the island. Myth has it that the Finns were shape-shifters and there are many stories attributed to them across the Shetland Islands and further afield in Europe; however,Fetlar boasts of having more Finn stories attributed to it than any other island on Shetland.
Nearby, and even harder to reach is the Fiddlers Crus. This stone circle consists of three rings of stone and was likely to be the dwelling of a 'Thing' or 'Ting' where local justice was carried out before it became centralized on the mainland of Shetland.
The Hjaltadans and
the Fiddlers Cruss stone circles feature strongly in a fictional Fetlar novel series called 'The AdderStane'. It is replete with fact and fiction and according to one of the guides at the local museum/Interpretive Centre has been said to be a 'reference work' for the island of Fetlar.

Source: atlasobscura.com