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Warden Law

Hillfort

<b>Warden Law</b>Posted by HobImage © IH
Also known as:
  • Warden Hill

Nearest Town:Hexham (5km SE)
OS Ref (GB):   NY904678 / Sheet: 87
Latitude:55° 0' 16.14" N
Longitude:   2° 9' 0.38" W

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<b>Warden Law</b>Posted by Rhiannon <b>Warden Law</b>Posted by Hob <b>Warden Law</b>Posted by Hob <b>Warden Law</b>Posted by Hob

Fieldnotes

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Small-medium hillfort with double ditch and bank structure.
Banks are low, ditches shallow, patches of bedrock protrude.
A number of hut circles are still visible.
Good views of Carr Hill rock art site to the NW, overlooks the confluence of the North and South Tyne to the SW.
Would suit Ottodini tribe looking to protect the upper Tyne from Brigantian incursion.

Ask at Laverick plantation Cottage for permission, as the rights of way which are still marked on some old maps as leading up to the fort from the trees, have been altered.

Poor access, requires climbing stiles.
Hob Posted by Hob
15th November 2004ce

Folklore

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Fourstones is the name of the settlement at the foot of the hillfort. So I admit this is a slightly shoehorned in bit of folklore but it is Stone related.. and who knows where and what the original Four Stones really were? It's easy to blame things on the Romans when you're so close to Hadrian's Wall.
The name of this place is said to have been derived "from its being bounded by four stones, supposed to have been formed to hold holy water." But other accounts say that these stones were Roman altars, and that there is a story current in the neighbourhood, that one of them was called the "Fairy Stone," because in the rebellion of 1715, the focus of this altar was formed into a square recess, with a cover, to receive the correspondence of the rebel chiefs, and that a little boy clad in green came in the twilight of very evening to carry away the letters left in it for Lord Derwentwater, and deposit his answers, which were "spirited" away in a similar manner by the agency of some of his friends.
From p868 of 'History, Topography and Directory of Northumberland' 1855. The page can be seen on Google Books here:
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8-kGAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA3-PA868

The book also mentions "Castle Hill" as an alternative name for this hillfort (the same name as that given to one of the Roman forts here) and how it "commands an extensive view of the North and South Tyne, and all the principal villages and buildings up both these rivers may be distinctly perceived." It does seem to have a very strategic location.

On the North side, the OS map marks the 'Giant's Well', which hints at some more local folklore.

2.4.08
Apparently: 1278.-- It appears to have been customary for the king of Scotland, the archbishop of York, the prior of Tynemouth, the bishop of Durham, and Gilbert de Umfreville (by their bailiffs), to meet the justices coming to Newcastle, to hold pleas, and ask their liberties of them [..] at "Fourstanes," when they came from Cumberland.

From 'Local Records; or, historical register of remarkable events' by John Sikes, v1, p29 (1833).
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MkkuAAAAMAAJ on Google Books.
Rhiannon Posted by Rhiannon
8th March 2008ce
Edited 2nd April 2008ce