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Different Lifting Styles in Scottish Stone Lifting - The Flawed Notion of One “Traditional” Scottish Lift

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Introduction Scottish stone lifting was never one fixed thing. The surviving evidence points to a range of local practices. Some stones were lifted from the ground to put the wind under the stone. Some were taken to the knee, lap, chest or shoulder. Some were carried. Some were placed on a plinth, dyke, standing stone or bar. Some were thrown. The old record is uneven because much of the tradition was local, oral and only partly written down. This means any modern discussion needs care. It is difficult to claim that one style was the only true Scottish style. The evidence is broader than that. It shows different standards in different places, with different stones, communities and local memories shaping what counted as a meaningful lift. I have omitted overhead pressing from the historical evidence section of this article. Peter Martin states that “no lift to be remembered was ever known” to have been carried out by putting a heavy stone overhead. That is a separate research question...