Images

Image of Hallion’s Rock (Cup and Ring Marks / Rock Art) by Jon Hills

This is in the valley between the crag and the trig point hill a little to the west of this panel, on top of one of the long flattish slabs of rock that emerge from the boggy watershed. It is very indistinct but definitely there. I will return with water at some point to reveal it better.

Image credit: Me
Image of Hallion’s Rock (Cup and Ring Marks / Rock Art) by Hob

Eroded rings, weathered cups and enhanced natural grooves.

Image credit: IH
Image of Hallion’s Rock (Cup and Ring Marks / Rock Art) by Hob

It’s those Simonside Hills again. This time viewed from Hallion’s Rock.

Image credit: IH
Image of Hallion’s Rock (Cup and Ring Marks / Rock Art) by Hob

The panel, with the jubilee stone (modern) in the background as a handy marker.

Image credit: IH

Articles

Hallion’s Rock

This motif gets a mention on page 122 of Stan Beckensall’s ‘Prehistoric Rock Art in Northumberland’.
However the map ref given in the book is a few nundred metres out. it’s best found by finding the ‘Jubilee stone’ off to the north of the path leading from the Poind and His man and the Middleton stone.

The motif is on the bedrock about 3m NE of the memorial stone. Note that the Jubilee stone is not prehistoric as some web sources imply, but it does give a good idea of how the stone used in prehistoric monuments erodes. It’s only been there a hundred years, and the words are galready gone at the top. The fact that it’s made from the quartzy sandstone made me wonder if it had once been a menhir.

It’s a simple, heavily eroded motif, consisting of 6 cups, one with a ring and an arc, another with a ring. The natural surface of the rock has been pecked to enhance natural grooves.

The site has excellent views to the Simonside hills.

Sites within 20km of Hallion’s Rock