PICTISH CAVALRY: THE “MOUNTING” EVIDENCE:
By Fisher Fine Arts Library Image Database - Camp and audience scenes in late iron age rock drawings from Khawtsgait, MongoliaPD-Art: Non-creative photograph of a two-dimensional work of art in the Public Domain (1st century BCE -1st century BCE), Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=95087609 Copious evidence points to prominent horse cultures in Amazon, Scythian, and Pictish societies. The Amazons, depicted primarily through the eyes of the ancient Greeks, are painted as hard-riding warriors, fighting from horseback, and dying beneath the hooves of their steeds. Scythian gravemounds yield treasure troves of horse gear, as well as the bones of the horses themselves, and the bodies of their riders: Amazonian warrior women, knees bent in the riding position. Pictish standing stones present the clearest picture. Their carven cartoons caricature a clear snapshot of Pictish riders – a few female – prancing in formation acros...
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