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Wales   South Wales   Swansea & Neath Port Talbot   The Gower Peninsular  

Maen Ceti

Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech

<b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by RedBrickDreamImage © Craig Gurney 15 September 2002
Also known as:
  • Arthur's Stone
  • King Arthur's Stone
  • Maen Cetti
  • Maen Cetty
  • Coetan Arthur

Nearest Town:Llanelli (11km N)
OS Ref (GB):   SS492906 / Sheet: 159
Latitude:51° 35' 36.64" N
Longitude:   4° 10' 38.28" W


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<b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by thesweetcheat <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by thesweetcheat <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by thesweetcheat <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by thesweetcheat <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by thesweetcheat <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by thesweetcheat <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by GLADMAN <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by postman <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by Jane <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by Cwrw <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by Kammer <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by RedBrickDream <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by RedBrickDream <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by RedBrickDream <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by RedBrickDream <b>Maen Ceti</b>Posted by RedBrickDream

Fieldnotes

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There is a large (but bumpy) parking area next to the main road. Maen Ceti is easily seen in the distance and can be reached by a 15 minute fairly flat walk. The cap stone is HUGE - as are the views across the Gower. Plenty of people about although this didn't detract from my visit. Posted by CARL
9th June 2010ce

The site is found up on high open moorland with amazing views back over to Llanelli to the north. The moor was crawling with shaggy frozen ponies. As you approach it you can see it's big but then - woooo!!! This is so much bigger and more impressive than I had ever imagined up close. The capstone is less of a cap and more of a mighty concrete helmet – perhaps weighing 40 or 50 tons (I kid you not!) - supported by really small uprights which look as if they have been driven into the earth under the vast weight of the elephantine lump above. The whole construction sits in a concave rubble cairn, so it's easy to imagine the original size of this place.

As we drove around, we kept getting sights of the monument perched up there on that chilly heath from miles away.
Jane Posted by Jane
29th December 2005ce
Edited 30th December 2005ce

Working in Swansea, I took the team out to Arthurs Stone to show them what real entertainment was. The parked camper hid the stone so we headed for the triangulation point before we saw it and then headed across the bog. OK so they sank a bit. It didn't warrant all that moaning. Anyway this was a great site. It's one big stone. The views are stunning and the sun was about an hour off setting between the two hills to west. Couldn't convince team to stay and watch. The lure of pubs and expenses was too strong. I'll have to come back another night dickie Posted by dickie
7th September 2001ce

Returned to 'the stone' as we locals call it. Now the foot & mouth verboten signs have gone, I realised how much I missed the freedom to be there! Has anyone else noticed - it takes minutes to reach the stone from roadside, yet it seems to take aeons to return! Aaaaaah - it's a NICE kinda hurt!!! Incidentally I notice that Arthur's Stone and Maen Cetti are listed separately - is there a reason for this - I'd always been told the stone and Maen Cetti are but two names for the same stone...(Gower)...or is there another Arthur's Stone in S. Wales? Love to you all, M'lass of Crofty haha. Posted by Nemesis Jones
10th July 2001ce
Edited 21st November 2002ce

Folklore

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King Arthur's Cromlech, or as it is usually called, King Arthur's stone, stands on a high and bleak hill..

..Some authors who have described this Cromlech, say it has but eight columns: but Pedestres examined the whole very minutely, and on getting under it, he discovered that on the east side, there are two blocks of stone placed close together, thereby making nine, out of what had been noticed as only eight....

...We are told that a spring of clear water rises from beneath it, known by the name of Our Lady's Well.. .. there was not one drop however there at six o'clock P.M. on the 11th of June, 1833.. [he thought] he might discover an indication by grubbing downwards a little among the bones of mother Earth. But no:- it was all dry. He then looked at the sea - he cast his eye towards the mouth of the river, and the line of coast: - the tide was out.*..

..It is called the Stone of Sketty:-- and "like the work of the Stone of Sketty," has passed into a Welsh proverb to express an undertaking of vast difficulty.
p349-351 of 'A Pedestrian Tour of Thirteen Hundred and Forty-seven Miles Through Wales and England', by (a bit of a card,) Pedestres (1836, v1). You can read his witticisms online at Google Books.

Chris Barber in his 1986 'More Mysterious Wales' has the Welsh version: "Mal gwaith Maen Cetti' - like the labour of the stone of Cetti.

*this refers to the folklore mentioned below, of the tide and spring being sychronised.
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
23rd June 2007ce
Edited 24th June 2007ce

Maen Cetti, on Cevn-y-bryn, in Gower, was, says ancient tradition, adored by the pagans; but Saint David split it with a sword, in proof that it was not sacred; and he commanded a well to spring from under it, which flowed accordingly. After this event, those who previously were infidels, became converted to the Christian faith. There is a church in the vicinity, called Llanddewi, where it is said that St. David was the rector, before he became consecrated a bishop; and it is the oldest church in Gower.
From 'Iolo Manuscripts: A Selection of Ancient Welsh Manuscripts, in Prose and Verse' by Taliesin Williams and completed by Rev. Thomas Price (1848).

online here on Google books.
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
19th January 2007ce

A species of divination is still practised at Arthurstone, by the neighbouring rustic maidens, who have little idea that they are perpetuating (perverted indeed in its object,) the rites of Druidism and the mysteries of Eleusis in their propitiatory offering. At midnight of the full moon, if a maiden deposit in the sacred well beneath, a cake of milk, honey, and barley meal, and then on hands and knees crawl three times round the cromlech, she will see, if "fancy free," the vision of her future lord; if her affections are engaged, the form of the favoured youth will stand before her, fearfully bound to answer truly her questions as to his sincerity.
. An early version of the folklore mentioned below. It's got to be worth a try.

p186 in
Tales of the Cymry: with notes illustrative and explanatory
By James Motley
1848
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
20th November 2006ce

.. I found some five years ago that there were [magical rites] connected with Arthur's Stone (Gower), though denied by my informant. But she "did hear that gels went and walked round it to see their sweethearts - a long time ago - and if they didn't see him they took off their shawls and went on their hands and knees - nobody is so fulish now." This from a young girl at Port Eynon.
Oh right. Just their shawls then is it. From p339 in 'A Fisher-Story and Other Notes from South Wales' by E. Sidney Hartland and T. H. Thomas, in Folklore, Vol. 16, No. 3. (Sep. 29, 1905).
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
25th September 2006ce

From 'Rude Stone Monuments in all Countries - their age and uses' by James Fergusson, 1872.
I think all antiquarians will agree with Sir Gardner Wilkinson in assuming that this is the stone of Cetti mentioned in the Welsh Triads... the 88th* Triad speaks of the three mightly achievements of the Isle of Britain; the raising of the stone of Cetti, the building of the work of Emmrys, and the heaping of the pile of Cyvragnon.
He suggests the work of Emmrys is Stonehenge and the pile of Cyvragnon, Silbury Hill.

*Not sure if this is true yet - need to find the original? The triads are rather dodgy as if they are the ones collected by Iolo Williams, he did make some of them up.
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
7th April 2006ce
Edited 19th July 2009ce

A very short distance away at SS497899 there is a holy well. According to Marie Trevelyan's "Folk-lore and folk-stories of Wales" (1909) it is "a spring which is said to flow with the ebb and flow of the tide. It is called Ffyn[n]on Fair, or Our Lady's Well. The water therefrom was lifted in the palm of the hand while the person who drank it wished."
The site is not miles from the sea in any direction, as it is on the Gower peninsular, but it's still hardly close, so its alleged ebb and flow would make it rather special.

I have later found out that Camden mentioned this in his 'Britannica':
They are to be seen upon a jutting at the north west of Cefn Bryn, the most noted hill in Gower; their fashion and posture is this, There is a vast unwrought stone, probably about 20 tons weight, supported by six or seven others that are not above four feet high, and these are set in a circle, some on one end, and some edgewise or sidelong, to bear the great one up. The great one is much diminished of what ithas been in bulk, as having five tons or more by report, broke off it to make millstones, so that I guess the stone originally to have been between twenty-five and thrity tons in weight.
The common people call it Arthur's Stone; under it is a well, which, as the neighbours tell me, has a flux and reflux with the sea."
Could it be true about the millstones? Or would it be unnecessary bother?
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
11th May 2005ce
Edited 7th March 2007ce

When we visited this burial chamber we took a bus from Swansea to Reynoldston village (just down Road). Anyway talking to the driver he said that people have called it Arthur's Stone mistakenly. Apparantley it used to be known as the 'Arth' Stone, 'arth' meaning 'bear' in Welsh. He also said that the chamber has an allignment with the great bear constellation and this is the reason for the name.

I do not know if it is alligned to the great bear or not but it would be interseting to find out. It is intresting that the burial chamber is kind of 'bear' like. It has a massive cap stone like a big body with these small stumpy legs!
matt saze Posted by matt saze
7th February 2005ce

On certain nights - particularly Midsummer's Eve and All Hallow's Eve, Maen Ceti gets up and goes to the sea to drink and bathe.

(Grinsell: folklore of prehistoric sites in Britain)
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
17th June 2004ce
Edited 19th January 2007ce

From A Gazetteer of Arthurian Topographic Folklore:
Ashe [quoted in Grooms, 1993, p.115] writes that 'Legend has it that when Arthur was walking through Carmarthenshire on his way to Camlann, he felt a pebble in his shoe and tossed it away. It flew seven miles over Burry Inlet and landed in Gower, on top of the smaller stones of Maen Cetti.'
Kammer Posted by Kammer
24th March 2003ce
Edited 22nd December 2003ce

At midnight, when the moon was full, young maidens would test the fidelity of the men they loved by offering the stone a cake baked from Barley meal and honey wetted with milk. They would then circle the stone three times on their hands and knees, knowing that if their man appeared before they finished their final circuit he would make a faithful husband.

source
http://www.explore-gower.co.uk/arthursstone.htm
Posted by phil
27th January 2002ce
Edited 21st November 2002ce

Miscellaneous

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The famous Druidical Monument, called Arthur's Stone, mentioned by Camden, is in this Parish, and is situate on the North side of Cefn y Brynn: it is supported by six rough Pillars; there are four other Pillars standing alone, which supported a part of the Stone, now broken off, by what means, unknown, though it is said that it was broken off for the purpose of making Mill-stones, but was afterwards found unfit for the intention: several smaller pieces have from time to time been broken off, chiefly through mere wickedness, so that it is much decreased in size; it is supposed to weigh now about Twenty Tons, and to have been brought from a distance, as it is of a different quality to the Stone found upon the Hill: underneath it is a Spring of water, seldom dry. A great quantity of loose stones, thrown there by the Country people, served to hide some part of the Pillars, but were cleared away at the expense of Mr. Lucas.
From 'A Topographical Dictionary of The Dominion of Wales' by Nicholas Carlisle (1811) - a section on the Genuki pages at http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/wal/GLA/Reynoldston/Lewis1833.html

On the summit of Cevn Bryn is a large cromlech, called Arthur's Stone, a vestige of Druidical antiquity, which Camden and other writers describe as being composed of a different species of stone from any found in this part of the country : this, however, appears to be erroneous, as it is the common pudding-stone, or millstone grit, of the country; and, within the recollection of persons still living, a huge fragment, which had been broken off with great labour, by means of wedges, and intended for a millstone, was found totally unfit for that purpose, from the cavities left in the surface by the falling out of the pebbles of which it consisted. The principal, or covering stone, is eleven feet in length and six feet and a half in its greatest breadth : it rests on twelve supporters, for fixing which the earth appears to have been excavated, and by the side of the cromlech lies the mass above noticed. A supposed miraculous well beneath this monument, which was said to ebb and flow with the sea, appears to be nothing more than a collection of water, after heavy rains, in the cavity formed for the insertion of the supporters, which fluctuates according to the weather, and which, as attested by intelligent persons residing near the spot, is frequently dry in hot summers. This cromlech is supposed to be alluded to in the historical triads of Wales, as one of the three Herculean labours. There are several mineral springs in the parish, to which medicinal properties are ascribed : of these, the most celebrated is Holy Well, on Cevn y Bryn mountain, to which, in former times, miraculous efficacy was attributed : it was generally frequented on Sunday evenings during the summer season by numbers of persons, who drank the water, and, according to an ancient custom, threw in a pin as a tribute of their gratitude.
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/wal/GLA/Llanrhidian/Lewis1833.html
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
22nd March 2006ce
Edited 26th October 2006ce

Links

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Stone-circles.org.uk


360 degree panorama of Maen Ceti - August 2004
Chris Collyer Posted by Chris Collyer
3rd August 2006ce
Edited 13th September 2006ce

Explore Gower: Arthur's Stone


A photo and a relatively lengthy description of Maen Ceti.
Kammer Posted by Kammer
21st March 2003ce
Edited 13th September 2006ce

Megalithica


One of the best known neolithic sites in S.Wales
3 good photos of Arthur's Stone (Maen Ceti) on this page.

The site also has gazetteer of Ancient Monuments and sites in the UK with special attention being paid to S.Wales

good photos
Posted by phil
27th January 2002ce