Images

Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by postman

The really impressive ring cairn and it’s attendant shake hole on the right, with the big cairn in the distance.

Image credit: Chris Bickerton
Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by postman

Ring cairn and it’s shake hole, surely there must be some mythical connection going on here, underworld related maybe.

Image credit: Chris Bickerton
Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by postman

Whats over the hill? more cairns probably, but really? isn’t the miracle of the ring cairn and shake holes enough?

Image credit: Chris Bickerton
Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by GLADMAN

The Mam C highlights the significant circumference of this fabulous ring cairn. A massive round cairn can be seen top left... there are many more in the locality of Cwm Cadlan, particularly upon Mynydd-y-glog.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by GLADMAN

Looking from within, the ring cairn almost managing not to lose some stone to a shake hole. Why build the monument so close? The effect, particularly nearing dusk, is ethereal in the extreme.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by GLADMAN

Note the massive Cefn Sychnant North cairn to the east (approx centre of image).... and the Gladman car, centre left. Easy access, then.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by GLADMAN

An enigmatic recumbent stone within the ring.... remnant of a cist, perhaps....looking toward Craig y Llyn (of Llyn Fawr fame)

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by GLADMAN

Very substantial monument... note how the ring just skirts the shake hole. C’mon, surely the two simply have to be connected?

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Cefn Sychbant (Ring Cairn) by GLADMAN

The finest ring cairn I’ve ever seen.....and not even on the map. I’ve driven around South Wales for 25 years and never thought to come to Cwm Cadlan before. Magnificent. Oh, and note the massive Cefn Sychbant North cairn beyond. There are many others in the vicinity.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone

Articles

Cefn Sychbant

Well I say... Ding, dong! As Leslie Phillips – that, ahem, ‘old school’ connoisseur of feminine beauty – might have said.... if he had’ve been a stone head. Hey who knows, perhaps he is? It would have been an appropriate exclamation, too, since in my opinion, this slumbering monument really is something special. Now, having trudged around these Isles for over a decade actively searching out remnants of our prehistoric past.... for some reason or other.... I kinda thought those jaw dropping moments – such as I experience upon encountering this (apparent) ring cairn – were more or less confined to those ‘hard to get to’ sites located in the middle of nowhere. Not there for the taking, just a short distance from the road. But there you are.

Funnily enough, bearing in mind its considerable circumference, the monument is not shown on the current OS maps (1:50 or 1:25K) so should not be confused with the pair of cairns actually depicted a little to the east. Easily done, however, with only the ‘aerial’ view from high ground to the north proving conclusive (Carl’s notes appear to refer to the cairn at SN98921108 and not this). Yeah, matters are not helped by the fact that, from my experience anyway, its very low profile renders it very difficult to spot from roadside. Consequently, upon stumbling down from Cadair Fawr (touch of shin splits, unfortunately) I’m utterly unprepared for the sheer size of this great stone polo. OK, there are other ring cairns in South Wales.... but, to my recollection (or lack of knowledge, perhaps), none of such dimensions, none hidden away in such plain sight. Why have I not been here sooner?

According to RCAHMW’s David Leighton (Jan ‘83) the site is an “...annular oval bank of mixed grade rubble and boulders without an entrance. It measures 20.7m internally (E-W) by 18.3m and is 2.5m-4.3m wide and 0.7m high. A small recumbent boulder near the centre is perhaps the remains of a cist”.

I wish I had much more time... but unfortunately the light is beginning to fade as the day draws to its inexorable conclusion. Hey, perhaps the sole logical reference point I’m aware of at this moment. A pastel pink glow illuminates the skyline to the west, the high escarpment of Craig-y-Llyn highlighting the location of The Llyn Fawr.... another sacred facet of this South Walian landscape back in the day. Once again a shake hole stands – if a hole can be said to stand? – fractionally outside the western arc of the ring cairn, so close, in fact, that a small section of said stonework has partially fallen into the enigmatic cavity in the limestone. The question inevitably presents itself: ‘why erect the ring so close?’ A reasonably sized recumbent stone lies within the centre of the monument suggesting the remnants of a former cist, whilst rising to the east, a massive round cairn stands at SN98551095. I am parked nearby.

Mr Leighton concedes that there is a possibility this massive masonry ring residing upon Cefn Sychnant is a trashed round cairn; however I agree, if only due to the conspicuous absence of internal cairn material, that a ring cairn is much more plausible, more probable. And what a glorious example it is, too. After half an hour I have to leave to catch that eastern monument before dark. But I know the Mam C will love this, so intend to return. As I prepare to vacate the site a boy racer trundles by staring at the day-glo clad individual sitting in the middle of the moor for no apparent reason. ‘What is he doing?’ Ah, bless. Guess I could’ve reciprocated and asked the same (presumed) question in return. Mind how you go, my muppet friend.

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Cefn Sychbant

Visited 16.2.14

This is the more northern of the two nearby cairns and is much more ruined.

A few large stones are in and around the centre of the Cairn.

Again, it is easily spotted from the road and worth the short walk.

COFLEIN states:

‘A badly robbed cairn survives in the form of a grass-grown stony ring bank 0.3m high, 1.2m wide and with an external diameter of about 10.5 to 11.5m. There is slight evidence for an inner kerb of larger stones.

In the 1950s ‘a wrecked central cist’ revealed a sandstone disk 4cm in diameter and 1cm thick, now in the National Museum (1).‘

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