| Corpus Refs: | Macalister/1909:224 Macalister/1949:765 Petrie/1872:46 |
| Site: | CLMAC |
| Discovery: | first mentioned, 1822 Petrie, G. |
| History: | |
| Geology: | |
| Dimensions: | 0.0 x 0.0 x 0.0 (Unknown) |
| Setting: | Lost (present , missing ) |
| Location: | unknown |
| Form: | fragment |
| Condition: | frgmntry , inc |
| Folklore: | none |
| Crosses: | 1: latin; outline; straight; plain; round holl; angular; inner curv; none; plain |
| Decorations: | Macalister/1909, 44: `Quadrate Celtic cross, inside a Greek fret-pattern'. Macalister/1949, 61: `Quadrangular border'. |
| Petrie, G. (1822): | ORO~A[R] | [--]THIN[-- Expansion: OROIT A[R][--]THIN[-- Expansion: OROIT AR MAEL-DOITHIN Petrie/1872 28 reading only |
| Orientation: | horizontal |
| Position: | n/a ; broad ; mixed ; undivided |
| Incision: | inc |
| Date: | None published |
| Language: | Goidelic (rbook) |
| Ling. Notes: | none |
| Palaeography: | CISP: The lettering is Insular half-uncial. The A is in the 'OC' form and the minuscule H appears to have a wedge-shaped finial. The letters of the first line are substantially larger than those of the second. The R is majuscule and the two Os are oval-shaped. The T is half-uncial with a curved ascender and a flat top-stroke. The damaged N appears to be minuscule with a rounded top stroke. |
| Legibility: | inc Petrie/1872, 28: `The abbreviation used here for OROIT is singular. As only three and a half of the final letters of the name exist, it is difficult to conjecture what it was, unless it is a name that ends in thin, such as Cairrthin'. Macalister/1909, 44: `The unusual abbreviation used for OROIT strikes me as a suspicious point about this transcript'. |
| Lines: | 2 |
| Carving errors: | 0 |
| Doubtful: | no |