Isbister in the Orkneys is one of those extraordinary archaeological sites where the remains of Neolithic man and his works have been so well preserved that they give us an amazingly clear picture of the life and people of 5000 years ago. In Tomb of the Eagles John W. Hedges describes vividly the activities of a tribe which had as its totem the magnificent white-tailed sea eagle. For these people the building and use of the tomb was symbol and expression of their identity. It was here that the dead joined their ancestors–but only after the flesh had been stripped from their bones. It was here, too, that offerings were made. Here broken pots were piled; fish, eagles and joints of meat mouldered; and the hands of the living sorted the heaped bones of the dead.
From reading the previews and foreword I had high expectations for this book. It certainly starts well, giving a useful background to Neolithic Orkney. However, about half-way through it turns into a rather dry and technically overloaded text on archaeology. The basic subject matter is fascinating, being the rather macabre practice of excarnation, where human bodies are left exposed for birds etc to devour the flesh before the bones are deposited into a cairn. The preservation and detailed excavation of this tomb afforded a vivid view of some of the ritual and cultural context of death in Neolithic times. I would have preferred to have had rather more comparative data from other cultures and other Neolithic sites to help understand what was happening and the religious implications of this practice.
This is a good introduction to archeology and specifically the neolithic monuments of Orkney (far north of Scotland). I recommend it though I have some issues with the writing. Hedges tells the fascinating story of this particular archeological discovery, the "tomb of the eagles," so named because of the bones of white-tailed sea eagles found entombed with the human remains and artifacts. Not only is the Isbister chambered cairn tomb, perched near the edge of sheer cliffs at the southern tip of the most southerly island of the Orkney archipelago, a highly significant discovery in terms of size, location, and contents. Its manner of excavation is also unusual and dramatic. After neither government nor university funding enabled the site's development in the two decades following its initial discovery in 1958, the farmer who first found it on his land, Ronald Simison, decided he'd excavate it himself. He read a great deal and taught himself the scientific methodology, then single-handedly carried out the work of the dig—extremely laborious, meticulous, time-consuming—in what free time he could take from his farm work. Hedges, who is a professional archeologist and journalist, gives Simison a great deal of credit for his care and methods where many other scientists would have opposed such amateur involvement. This book could certainly have been stronger, though; it tries too hard for acceptance from the discipline at the expense of a more entertaining tale in a popular account of the science of archeology and the story of stone-age Britain it reconstructs. In other words, Hedges gets too technical and gets away from his narrative—given that the main audience of the book, a separate project from the scientific report that was published in the trade journals, is most likely going to be interested lay readers like me rather than real archeologists.