Knocking stone

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A knocking stone.

Knocking stones, Knockin'-stanes[1] or Clach chnotainn in Scottish Gaelic were exposed bedrock stone or boulders[2] with a pot-shaped concavity cut into them used for husking barley and other cereals before the introduction of other methods of milling grain or when only small quantities of cereal were processed.[3]

Knocking or husking stones were generally replaced by quern stones which in turn were eventually replaced by water and wind powered mills. They were once used by every farming household; abandoned examples can still be found in Ireland, the Highlands, and the Western Isles.[4] In 1635 however the Chronicle of Perth records how they still had small scale use – "Thair wes great skairstie of wictuall, and elding mylnis gaed not, and thair wes no passage nor travelling to bring ony in. At that tyme aill wes waid skant. They knokit malt in knoking stones."[5]

Knocking stones remained in use until the end of the nineteenth century in the Highlands and islands, and elsewhere in rural areas.[6][7]

Structure and function

See also

References

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