Rhiannon

Rhiannon

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Folklore

Dinas Emrys
Hillfort

Local lore adds more about Merlin. He stayed on for a while after Vortigern left. When he left himself he filled a golden cauldron with treasure and hid it in a cave, blocking the entrance with a stone and a heap of earth. The treasure is intended for one particular person, a youth with blue eyes and yellow hair. When he approaches, a bell will ring and the cave will unblock itself. Other treasure seekers have been repulsed by storms and sinister omens.

p89 in Geoffrey Ashe’s ‘The Landscape of King Arthur’ (1987).

Folklore

Cadbury Castle (South Cadbury)
Hillfort

According to legend the ghosts of Arthur and his knights make a periodic nocturnal ride over the hilltop and down to Sutton Montis below, where their horses drink at a spring. This is reputed to happen on Midsummer Eve or Midsummer Night, or Christmas Eve, or every seventh year, so the ghosts may be difficult to catch riding.

I have kept the vigil twice without seeing them, but perhaps I chose the wrong night; and I do recall walking along the uppermost rampart in pitch darkness, and hearing, far below in the woods, the sound of a flute.

p45 in ‘The Landscape of King Arthur’ by Geoffrey Ashe (1987). Hmm. A flute – or maybe pan pipes?? Spooky.

The name of the highest part of the plateau can be traced to at least the same kind of time (1586): ‘Arthur’s Palace’. Curiously, (although no trace was known before excavation) there actually was a timber hall on that spot in the 5th century – the era that an ‘Arthur’ would have lived. There was also a gatehouse (in the gap in the top rampart to the SW) and the whole perimeter was protected by a 16ft thick fortification made of stone and wood. Such a type and size of structure is apparently very unusual for this period – so ‘Camelot’ is actually quite credible as the headquarters of a king or regional chief, according to Ashe’s book.

Folklore

Glastonbury Tor
Sacred Hill

To this day you can hear local tales of a chamber below the summit, or a well sinking far into the depths, or a tunnel running all the way to the Abbey, a distance of more than half a mile. Rash explorers are supposed to have found a way in and to have come out insane.

From ‘The Landscape of King Arthur’ by Geoffrey Ashe (1987).

Miscellaneous

Maumbury Rings
Henge

“Local resident William Barnes, now best known for his poems in the Dorset dialect, was concerned at the proposals by the London & South Western Railway to remove a large part of the ancient earthworks of Maumbury Rings and at the Great Western Railway’s intention to put a deep cutting through the Roman aqueduct at Poundbury. As a result, Barnes became one of the founder members of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society. The Society eventually founded the County Museum.”

From the Dorset Model Railway Association webpages at
myweb.tiscali.co.uk/34091/Dorset-Railways/dorset_railways_exhibition_notice.htm

Folklore

Loch St Clair
Chambered Cairn

This small circle of 6 stones could be (according to the RCAHMS record) the remains of a chambered cairn, from which the small stones have been robbed. There are a number of similar monuments in this area, overlooked by Bheinn Tangabhal – so you can bet one of them is the setting for the following story:

THE TULMAN.

There was a woman in Baile Thangusdail*, and she was out seeking a couple of calves; and the night and lateness caught her, and there came rain and tempest, and she was seeking shelter. She went to a knoll with the couple of calves, and she was striking a tether-peg into it. The knoll opened. She heard a gleegashing as if a pot-hook were clashing beside a pot. She took wonder, and she stopped striking the tether-pig. A woman put out her head and all above her middle, and she said, “What business hast thou to be troubling this tulman in which I make my dwelling?” “I am taking care of this couple of calves, and I am but weak. Where shall I go with them?” “Thou shalt go with them to that breast down yonder. Thou wilt see a tuft of grass. If thy couple of calves eat that tuft of grass, thou wilt not be a day without a milk cow as long as thou art alive, because thou hast taken my counsel.”

As she said, she never was without a milk cow after that, and she was alive fourscore and fifteen years after the night she was there.

* Now ‘Tangasdal’, I assume. ‘Tulman’ sounds suspiciously like ‘dolmen’, or perhaps that’s coincidence? Perhaps someone local knows of this term. The story goes to show that you should be polite to people who live in grassy mounds – the woman lived to a great age in addition to her luck with livestock.

From “Scottish Fairy and Folk Tales” by Sir George Douglas [1901]. Online version at the excellent ‘Sacred Texts Archive’:
sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/sfft/sfft33.htm

Folklore

Peat Law
Cairn(s)

The following is an account of a fairy frolic said to have happened late in the last century:--The victim of elfin sport was a poor man, who, being employed in pulling heather upon Peatlaw, a hill in Selkirkshire, had tired of his labour, and laid him down to sleep upon a fairy ring. When he awakened, he was amazed to find himself in the midst of a populous city, to which, as well as to the means of his transportation, he was an utter stranger. His coat was left upon the Peatlaw; and his bonnet, which had fallen off in the course of his aerial journey, was afterwards found hanging upon the steeple of the church of Lanark. The distress of the poor man was, in some degree, relieved by meeting a carrier, whom he had formerly known, and who conducted him back to Selkirk, by a slower conveyance than had whirled him to Glasgow.

That he had been carried off by the fairies was implicitly believed by all who did not reflect that a man may have private reasons for leaving his own country, and for disguising his having intentionally done so.

From Scottish Fairy and Folk Tales
by Sir George Douglas
[1901] – his source supposedly being Sir Walter Scott’s “Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border”.

What sort of cynic would doubt such a story (especially as his hat was found on the steeple). But if you are ever tempted to ‘do a bunk’ and start a new life somewhere – perhaps it’s not that advisable these days to profess you were kidnapped by the fairies. Call it aliens or something (more fashionable).

Folklore

Burnswark
Sacred Hill

A similar story to the one below (this time involving a brother kidnapped by the fairies of the Burnswark, with the sister left behind) is ‘Elphin Irving – The Fairies’ Cupbearer’. You can read a long version (including song) in ‘Scottish Fairy and Folk Tales’ by Sir George Douglas [1901] – an online version available courtesy of the magnanimous people at the Sacred Texts Archive:
sacred-texts.com/neu/celt/sfft/sfft81.htm

Folklore

St. Michael’s Mount
Natural Rock Feature

The tradition that the Mount was formerly called in old Cornish, Careg-luz en kuz*, and that it rose from the midst of an extensive forest, is very prevalent. “A forest is supposed to have extended along the coast to St Michael’s Mount, which was described as a ‘hoare rock in a wood,’ and stood five or six miles from the sea. The bay was said to have been a plain of five or six miles in extent, formed into parishes, each having its church, and laid out in meadows, corn-fields, and woods.”

*or Careg cowse in clowse--i.e., the hoary rock in the wood.

This and much other folklore connected with the island at the online version of Hunt’s ‘Popular Romances of the West of England’, at the sacred texts archive:
sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/prwe/prwe088.htm

Folklore

Dodman Point
Cliff Fort

This Iron Age cliff fort has been reused for defensive purposes over the centuries, during the Napoleonic and First World wars. But the IA earthworks (presumably referred to in the folklore below) aren’t the first signs of the place’s significance – there are also Bronze Age barrows which survive.

In the parish of Goran is an intrenchment running from cliff to cliff, and cutting off about a hundred acres of coarse ground. This is about twenty feet broad, and twenty-four feet high in most places.

Marvellous as it may appear, tradition assures us that this was the work of a giant, and that he performed the task in a single night. This fortification has long been known as Thica Vosa, and the Hack and Cast.

The giant, who lived on the promontory, was the terror of the neighbourhood, and great were the rejoicings in Goran when his death was accomplished through a stratagem by a neighbouring doctor.

The giant fell ill through eating some food--children or otherwise--to satisfy his voracity, which had disturbed his stomach. His roars and groans were heard for miles, and great was the terror throughout the neighbourhood. A messenger, however, soon arrived at the residence of the doctor of the parish, and he bravely resolved to obey the summons of the giant, and visit him. He found the giant rolling on the ground with pain, and he at once determined to rid the world, if possible, of the monster.

He told him that he must be bled. The giant submitted, and the doctor moreover said that, to insure relief, a large hole in the cliff must be filled with the blood. The giant lay on the ground, his arm extended over the hole, and the blood flowing a torrent into it. Relieved by the loss of blood, he permitted the stream to flow on, until he at last became so weak, that the doctor kicked him over the cliff, and killed him. The well-known promontory of The Dead Man, or Dodman, is so called from the dead giant. The spot on which he fell is the “Giant’s House,” and the hole has ever since been most favourable to the growth of ivy.

From Hunt’s ‘Popular Romances of the West of England’ (3rd ed. 1903), online at the Sacred Texts Archive.
sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/prwe/prwe020.htm

Folklore

St. Michael’s Mount
Natural Rock Feature

Do giants always have to reach a sticky end?

The giant on the Mount and the giant on Trecrobben Hill were very friendly. They had only one cobbling-hammer between them, which they would throw from one to the other, as either required it. One day the giant on the Mount wanted the hammer in a great hurry, so he shouted, ” Holloa, up there! Trecrobben, throw us down the hammer, woost a’?”

“To be sure,” sings out Trecrobben; “here! look out, and catch ‘m.”

Now, nothing would do but the giant’s wife, who was very nearsighted, must run out of her cave to see Trecrobben throw the hammer. She had no hat on; and coming at once out into the light, she could not distinguish objects. Consequently, she did not see the hammer coming through the air, and received it between her eyes. The force with which it was flung was so great that the massive bone of the forehead of the giantess was crushed, and she fell dead at the giant’s feet. You may be sure there was a great to-do between the two giants. They sat wailing over the dead body, and with their sighs they produced a tempest. These were unavailing to restore the old lady, and all they had to do was to bury her. Some say they lifted the Chapel Rock and put her under it, others, that she is buried beneath the castle court, while some--no doubt the giants’ detractors--declare that they rolled the body down into the sea, and took no more heed of it.

From Hunt’s ‘Popular Romances of the West of England’ (1903 – 3rd ed) – online at the Sacred Texts Archive
sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/prwe/prwe014.htm

Folklore

Carn Galva
Tor enclosure

More about the giant who lived on Carn Galva:

Holiburn, according to tradition, was a very amiable and somewhat sociable gentleman; but, like his brethren, he loved to dwell amongst the rocks of Cairn Galva. He made his home in this remote region, and relied for his support on the gifts of sheep and oxen from the farmers around--he, in return, protecting them from the predatory incursions of the less conscientious giants of Trecrobben. It is said that he fought many a battle in the defence of his friends[...] I once heard that Holiburn had married a farmer’s daughter, and that a very fine race, still bearing a name not very dissimilar, was the result of this union.

So if you meet any exceptionally tall people in the locality, perhaps they could be a relation. From Hunt’s ‘Popular Romances of the West of England’ (1903, 3rd ed), online at the Sacred Texts Archive
sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/prwe/prwe010.htm

Hunt also heard from a man named Halliwell that “"Somewhere amongst the rocks in this cairn is the Giant’s Cave” where the giant lived.

Folklore

Trencrom Hill
Hillfort

Trencrom Hill was also used as a spot from which to throw stones at St Michael’s Mount:

In several parts of Cornwall there are evidences that these Titans were a sportive race. Huge rocks are preserved to show where they played at trap-ball, at hurling, and other athletic games. The giants of Trecrobben and St Michael’s Mount often met for a game at bob-buttons. The Mount was the “bob,” on which flat masses of granite were placed to serve as buttons, and Trecrobben Hill was the “mit,” or the spot from which the throw was made. This order was sometimes reversed. On the outside of St Michael’s Mount, many a granite slab which had been knocked off the “bob” is yet to be ‘found; and numerous piles of rough cubical masses of the same rock, said to be the granite of Trecrobben Hill, [a] show how eagerly the game was played.

Also from Hunt’s book, online at the sacred texts archive.
sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/prwe/prwe009.htm

Hunt mentions that “Trecrobben Hill still exhibits the bowl in which the giants of the west used to wash.” – so you may wish to keep your eyes open for this if you visit. This is presumably ‘The Bowl Rock’, on the stream to the NE, judging from the OS map.

Folklore

Trencrom Hill
Hillfort

On the summit of this hill, which is only surpassed in savage grandeur by Cam Brea, the giants built a castle--the four entrances to which still remain in Cyclopean massiveness to attest the Herculean powers by which such mighty blocks were piled upon each other. There the giant chieftains dwelt in awful state. Along the serpentine road, passing up the hill to the principal gateway, they dragged their captives, and on the great flat rocks within the castle they sacrificed them. Almost every rock still bears some name connected with the giants--“a race may perish, but the name endures.” The treasures of the giants who dwelt here are said to have been buried in the days of their troubles, when they were perishing before the conquerors of their land. Their gold and jewels were hidden deep in the granite caves of this hill, and secured by spells as potent as those which Merlin placed upon his “hoarded treasures.” They are securely preserved, even to the present day, and carefully guarded from man by the Spriggans, or Trolls, of whom we have to speak in another page.

From Hunt’s ‘Popular Romances of the West of England’ (3rd ed 1903). He mentions that Trencrom was also known as Trecrobben Hill.
sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/prwe/prwe008.htm

Folklore

Paviland Cave
Cave / Rock Shelter

The vulgar belief is that the Red Lady was entombed in the cave by a storm while seeking treasure there – a legend the truth of which no one can dispute with authority, since the bones are certainly of a period contemporary with the Roman rule in this island.

From ‘British Goblins’ by Wirt Sikes (p387) 1880.

Folklore

Penllech Coetan Arthur
Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech

“[A]cromlech named ‘Arthur’s Quoit’ is found in Myllteyrn parish, Caernarvonshire (SH22973456). Professor Grooms (1993, pp.118-9) translates the following from Myrddin Fardd (writing in the 19th-century), which is worth repeating for its illustration of the local folkloric traditions surrounding these stones:”

A multitude of tales are told about him [Arthur]. Sometimes, he is portrayed as a king and mighty soldier, other times like a giant huge in size, and they are found the length and bredth of the land of stones, in tons in weight, and the tradition connects them with his name – a few of them have been in his shoes time after time, bothering him, and compelling him also to pull them, and to throw them some unbelievable distance... A cromlech recognized by the name ‘Coetan Arthur’ is on the land of Trefgwm, in the parish of Myllteyrn; it consists of a great stone resting on three other stones. The tradition states that ‘Arthur the Giant’ threw this coetan from Carn Fadrun, a mountain several miles from Trefgwm, and his wife took three other stones in her apron and propped them up under the coetan.

Borrowed from Thomas Green, the writer of “A Gazetteer of Arthurian Topographic Folklore” at arthuriana.co.uk/concepts/folkgazt.htm

Folklore

Slaughter Bridge Stone
Standing Stone / Menhir

The bridge is said to be haunted by ‘weary looking phantoms’ – they cross the bridge in the gloaming, looking misty and depressed as though they’ve just staggered from the battle, and then ‘pouf’ melt into the dusk. Or so says Marc Alexander, in his completely unreferenced ‘Companion to the folklore, myths and customs of Britain’ (2002). He also calls the stone ‘Arthur’s Gravestone’.

Apparently there are two stones though?? Which is a bit confusing? One in the stream and one by the stream? The following from the Celtic Inscribed Stones doesn’t exactly clarify things.
ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/cisp/database/

There is some confusion about the exact history of this stone as it appears to have occasionally been mixed-up with a second, probably uninscribed stone which now lies in the stream.

Okasha/1993, records that the stone was first mentioned in 1602. By 1754 it had been used as a footbridge and then as part of a early 18th landscape folly. The stone is unlikely to have moved since at least 1799.

..the first recorded location of the stone was its use as part of a footbridge at Slaughterbridge. We do not know the original location.

..Nearby, in the early 18th century, Lady Dowager Falmouth created a kind of hill with spiral walks to which the stone was removed as decoration.

Miscellaneous

Rawlsbury
Hillfort

Rawlsbury (900ft above sea level) is the second highest hill fort in Dorset being surpassed only by Pilsdon Pen (970ft). It is superbly sited and on a clear day there is a sweep of country all around which in sheer beauty can scarcely be surpassed in all England. Before you lie the Purbeck Hills running down to the sea, the great heath, the glorious fertile Vale of Blackmore running across to Somerset, and Glastonbury Tor. All this can be seen on one side whilst to the other the hill top town of Shaftesbury, the mid-Dorset downs and far away Hampshire and the Isle of Wight can be seen. Truly a place worth visiting for the view alone. This fort must have been well nigh impregnable but as it has never been excavated we do not know if it fell to Vespasian. Certainly from Hod and Hambledon Vespasian must have seen Rawlsbury very clearly and is unlikely to have left so powerful a fort uncaptured on his flank.

‘Exploring Ancient Dorset’ by George Osborn, 1976.

Timewatch criticises latest dig at Ladybridge

The Chairman of TimeWatch, George Chaplin, is unhappy with the way the further examination of the Ladybridge farm site is being conducted.

“This newest digging will not produce the eight to ten per cent sample required by English Heritage and, in fact, is focused on an area where artefacts have already been found,” he said this week. The researchers appear to be focusing only on Neolithic archaeology in one location while additional important archaeology is likely to be located where they are not looking.

“We are concerned that the current digging is being done in a hurried manner, in bad weather, using heavy equipment, and without the constant supervision of an outside group of archaeologists who have no vested interest in the outcome.”

But archaeologist Steve Timms, who is heading the team conducting the additional archaeological investigation at Ladybridge, has dismissed the group’s claims.

More at knaresboroughtoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=18&ArticleID=1244009

There is an open morning at the site tomorrow between 8am and noon.

Miscellaneous

Bedd y Gwr Hir
Cairn(s)

Coflein’s record says:

The site, which occupies a triangular patch of ground beside the road, has undulating, disturbed ground, forming a possible mound approximately 2.5m diameter and 0.5m tall. On the W side is an unusually wide drystone field wall.
R Hayman, Hayman & Horton, 18/12/2003

Miscellaneous

Three Tremblers
Round Barrow(s)

The Three Tremblers are three adjacent round barrows, the tallest about 3m high. They are in The Tabular Hills in Wykeham Forest – an area which contains a large number of prehistoric monuments from Neolithic to Iron Age times.

But why are they called the Three Tremblers? Someone must have a story to explain. Perhaps if you sit on them you can feel strange goings-on beneath the ground. Perhaps this whole region is a bit strange – well it would explain the large number of barrows here (Or perhaps it’s got nothing to do with it).

Folklore

Louven Howe
Round Barrow(s)

This barrow (now marking a boundary) is said to contain a pot of gold. But don’t be getting any ideas. It is guarded by a ‘big hag-worm or adder’, and if that isn’t enough to see you off, then the inevitable thunderstorm that will roll up when you start meddling will soon scare you away.

(recorded by Grinsell in ‘Folklore of Prehistoric Sites in Britain’ 1976 – will have original source noted but I forgot).

Folklore

Russell’s Cairn
Cairn(s)

Russell’s Cairn at Windy Gyle is supposed to mark the site of the mysterious death of Lord Francis Russell in 1585. He was in a truce meeting with the Scottish Warden Thomas Ker at the time. It’s thought that he could have been bumped off as part of an English plot to remove Ker and other Catholic supporters of Queen Mary from their positions of power by implying they murdered him. The cairn’s thought to be Bronze Age though, and there are others along the ridge.

See:
archive.org/stream/uppercoquetdalen00dixo#page/51/mode/1up

Folklore

Ashmore Down
Long Barrow

A round barrow near Ashmore was once haunted by little ‘gabbygammies’ or ‘gappergennies’ who made strange noises. Funnily enough, the strange noises ceased after the barrow was opened and the bones allegedly found inside reburied in the village churchyard. Poor gabbygammies. There probably aren’t any in the longbarrow near Ashmore but if you hear any strange noises while you’re there..

(mentioned by Grinsell in ‘Folklore of Prehistoric Sites in Britain, 1976, not sure of original source he quotes)

Miscellaneous

Ashmore Down
Long Barrow

This long barrow is close to the Roman (and now modern) road which crosses the high ground of the Down. It’s presumably positioned for prominence from below, aligned along the slope and still stands up to 2 1/2 metres high (info. from its record on Magic).

Unique designs found on slab in Beauly cairn?

Unusual designs have been found on a 5000-year-old stone slab discovered inside a cairn near Beauly. The sandstone slab formed one side of a burial chamber within the cairn, and was discovered after Highland Council ordered a quarry company to undertake an archaeological survey on the site at Balblair prior to extracting rock and gravel.

Andrew Dutton, a senior archaeologist with Headland Archaeology, said:
“It has certainly got people scratching their heads, ” he admitted. “It is unique. There is a lot of rock art around here and the cup and ring symbol can be seen in the open air at several sites but the curvilinear lines on this slab are very strange. Also the cup marks have been worked through from both sides until there is a perforation that, perhaps, people could look through to see inside the kist or to let light inside.”

The stone is now in a store at Inverness Museum until more of its story can be unravelled. Conservation officer Jeanette Pearson is making its surface stable to preserve the carvings.“It is very unusual, ” she said. “I’ve never seen anything like it. It’s certainly not Pictish so we are seeking specialist advice from the National Museum to help us identify it.”

From the Inverness Courier article here.

'Poignant finds' at Unst dig

The excavation of an Iron Age site at Sand Wick on Unst, funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund and Historic Scotland, was initially aimed at training volunteers how to excavate eroding coastlines. However, archaeologists from Glasgow University, the Scottish Coastal Archaeology and the Problems of Erosion Trust (SCAPE) and local volunteers have excavated many artefacts and an interesting skeleton. The skeleton was found lying on its back with a polished stone disc tucked inside its mouth. Near the arm was a tiny ornament formed of rings of copper alloy and bone which the team believes was some kind of pendant.

Dr Olivia Lelong, excavation director and project director of Glasgow University Archaeological Research Division, said: “The skeleton was a totally unexpected find. It was a beautifully composed burial, obviously put together with a great deal of thought and care, from the way the body was placed to the objects buried with the person.”

Full article at the Scotsman website:
news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=2136632005

EH working with local police to protect Eston Moor

Kate Wilson, inspector of ancient monuments for English Heritage North-East has called for action to stop arsonists on Eston Moor who are destroying the heather which protects archaeological sites. Trials bikes and off-road vehicles are also damaging the earthworks.

Detective Constable Trevor Smith, of Cleveland Police, who said: “By building a closer relationship with English Heritage, we can reduce the number of incidents of damage to scheduled monuments and, where necessary, secure convictions against those responsible for the damage.”

The organisations are also concerned that fences have been ripped up and used as bonfire fuel, while earlier this year two sheep were slaughtered and one farmer’s cattle were stampeded through a neighbour’s crops.

Police recently seized an air rifle, an axe, a 6in combat knife and lock knives from rival gangs of children camping around landmark rocky outcrop Eston Nab in groups of up to 40. Over one weekend last summer, Cleveland Police rounded up 22 teenagers, with an average age of 14, of whom six were armed.

full article at
thisisthenortheast.co.uk/the_north_east/teesside/news/NEWS0.html

Folklore

Bartlow Hills
Round Barrow(s)

There seem to be various traditions relating to skipping in Easter week, from various places around the country. In Cambridgeshire, Good Friday seems to have been the day singled out. “An eighty year old woman of Linton recalled in the 1930s that in her youth the villagers of Linton and Hadstock used to skip on Good Friday to Bartlow Hills to join in the fun of the fair held there.”

p107 in ‘Cambridgeshire Customs and Folklore’ by Enid Porter (1969).

Folklore

Garth Hill
Round Barrow(s)

Mind out for the ferns on Garth Hill.

A very amusing story about fern-seed came from the neighbourhood of the Garth Mountain, Glamorgan. An aged Welshman said that when he was a small boy he heard his grandfather gravely relating the experience of a neighbour who chanced to be coming homeward through the mountain fern on Midsummer Night between twelve and one o’clock. At that hour fern-seed is supposed to ripen, to fail off directly, and be lost. Some of the fern-seed fell upon his coat and into his shoes. He thought nothing of this, but went home.

At this point he totally freaks out his family, because they can’t see him, but they can hear him talking – he remains invisible until he inadvertently shakes the seeds from his clothing.

The man who told this story said that when he was a boy not a person would wear a fern of any kind – first, because it caused men to lose their paths; and secondly, because adders were likely to follow you so long as it was worn.

From Marie Trevelyan’s ‘Folk lore and folk stories of Wales’ (1909).
Of course, really boring botanists would tell you that ferns don’t have seeds.

Folklore

The Beacons (Llantrisant)
Round Barrow(s)

A number of round barrows known as ‘The Beacons’ sit on Mynydd Garthmaelwg. Marie Trevelyan recounts a peculiar story about this mountain:

The following story about a black snake was told in the first half of the nineteenth century. It must have been a very old story because the narrator always located it on the nearest mountain to his home and this particularly black reptile appeared to have no fixed abode. In Carmarthenshire it was located among the Van Mountains; in Pembrokeshire it was found in the Preceley Range; while in Glamorgan its home was the Great Garth, the Llantrisant, or Aberdare Ranges. The story ran thus: A great black snake was seen coiled in the sunshine. Its head and tail did not exactly meet, but left a small opening. In the middle of the coil there was a large heap of gold and silver and copper coins. A working man once saw all this treasure, and he resolved to have some for himself. There was nothing to be done but to just pass through the opening between the black snake’s head and tail, and step in. At first the man was afraid, but, mustering up courage, he stepped in. He saw that the snake was asleep, and there would be no harm in having some of the coins for himself; so he began to fill his pockets with gold, silver, and copper. When his pockets were full, he took off his coat, laid it down, and began filling it with more treasure. Greediness made him forget the snake, but a fearful roaring frightened him. He immediately left his coat where it was, and fled. Looking back, he saw the black snake and the treasure sinking into the mountain, and the noise ceased.

From ‘Folk-lore and folk-stories of Wales’ (1909)

The Rhondda Cynon Taf Libraries Heritage Trail website at
fhttps://webapps.rhondda-cynon-taf.gov.uk/libraries/heritagetrail/taff/llanharran/Llanharan.htm
has some additional information:

Until a few generations ago, the Brenin Llwyd or Grey Monarch of the Mists was believed to inhabit this mountain and woe betide anyone caught in his grasp! A walk from Llanharan towards Llantrisant over the mountains will still take you to the site of “The Beacons”, where before the 1700s the Militia met to muster and show arms. In later times this beacon would be lit to celebrate coronations. A short distance to the east is the location of the popular Egg Wells, whose sulphurous waters attracted hundreds of summer visitors to sample their curative properties and enjoy the fairground atmosphere.

Folklore

Hendrefor
Burial Chamber

Just to the north of these two ruined burial chambers is Llyn Llwydiarth and the mountain Mynydd Llwydiarth. Evans-Wentz described the story told by two local sisters, Miss Mary Owen and Mrs Betsy Thomas (who were 103 and 100 years old respectively, when he spoke to them in 1911).

There were many of the Tylwyth Teg on the Llwydiarth Mountain above here, and round the Llwydiarth Lake where they used to dance; and whenever the prices at the Llangefri market were to be high they would chatter very much at night. They appeared only after dark; and all the good they ever did was singing and dancing.

From ‘The fairy faith in Celtic countries’.

Folklore

Brimham Rocks
Rocky Outcrop

There are so many strange names for the rocks here: tortoises, frogs, cannons – and they’re no doubt constantly changing according to fashion, as the quote below suggests:

On the verge of the precipice which girdles the mass of rocks on this side, stand the Baboon’s Head, the Pulpit Rock, the Serpent’s Head, and the Yoke of Oxen; (These names are frequently changed by the innovating, garrulous guide, who has changed the Baboon’s Head to the Gorilla’s, and the Yoke of Oxen to the Bulls of Babylon, which unsettling of nomenclature he calls keeping pace with the times. Unique as the rocks are amongst the freaks of nature, there is nearly as much originality about the guide but infinitely less grandeur.) Near this last is the Idol Rock, one of the most singular masses, and one of the greatest wonders of the place.

From an 1863 pamphlet on line at
nidderdale.org/Antiquarian/Brimham%20Grainge/Brimham%20Grainge%20Home.htm

Some of the stones are Rocking Stones. It’s said they can only be moved by an honest person. Peter Walker (’Folk Stories from the Yorkshire Dales’ 1991) says it is a local joke that no Yorkshireman has ever managed to rock them!

He also reports that somewhere among the rocks is a cave where a witch lived: “The Abode of the Great Sybil, who was said to be even more remarkable at fortune telling than the famous Mother Shipton of Knaresborough.”

One of the more famous stories is of Edwin and Julia. They were madly in love with each other but Julia’s father wasn’t having any of it. Especially when Edwin asked for his daughter’s hand in marriage. He forbade them to see each other any more. But of course, they couldn’t stand to live without each other. They decided to leap off Brimham Rocks and spend eternity together that way. Julia’s father got wind of the plan and dashed up there to dissuade them – but they jumped before he could reach them. However, by some miracle, instead of plummeting to their dooms, they floated gently to the ground. “Some said that a fairy who lived among the rocks had witnessed their misery and knew they could be happy if only they were allowed to marry.” Perhaps it was the influence of the Druids – or maybe even the magic in the rocks themselves. More boring people put it down to Julia’s skirts being so voluminous. But whatever, her Father at last consented to their marriage and naturally they lived happily ever after. And the rock was forever known as ‘Lovers’ Leap’ or ‘Lovers’ Rock’.

Folklore

Hunter’s Burgh
Long Barrow

Leslie Grinsell claims that ‘Hunter’s Barrow’ was named by Colt Hoare, as he had found it contained a number of arrow heads and deer antlers, appropriate to the burial of a hunter.*

The ancient burial mounds of England, 1936.

(*Not that I’m doubting the legendary LVG, but did Colt Hoare really make a habit of naming barrows? So many must have had arrow heads in..)

Miscellaneous

Roughridge Hill
Long Barrow

The most obvious landscape feature on Roughridge Hill is no doubt Wansdyke, but at its side is a hugely older Neolithic long barrow. Two early Bronze Age round barrows were also on the hill: these were excavated by Proudfoot in the 1960s. Underneath them he found traces of pits dating to the early Neolithic. The largest was over 2m across and contained: pottery sherds from over 30 pots; worked flints; a broken polished axehead; bone pins; antler; a sarsen polissoir; bones of cattle, pigs and sheep; and a piece of human bone! In the base of another was a human cremation. It seemed that the site had been occupied for a few months (or maybe a couple of years) and at that time was a clearing in woodland; the pits were maybe filled in at the time the people moved on, maybe with ceremony.

Pollard and Reynolds describe the discoveries in ‘Avebury- the biography of a landscape’ (2002) and emphasise that these pits are really the first traces of Neolithic activity in the Avebury region.

Wetland sites being lost through drainage

A study has highlighted how rural development and drainage for agriculture in the Somerset levels has badly damaged nationally important archaeological sites.

When ground water levels drop in the summer, the waterlogged remains dry out: current farming methods don’t leave enough water inthe peat to protect them.

The study focused on 13 of the most important sites near Glastonbury, including prehistoric trackways and villages. Some sites had already been lost while others were suffering gradual decay.

Vanessa Straker of English Heritage said: “We are encouraging as many farmers as possible to apply for Defra’s environmental stewardship scheme, which gives them payments in return for conserving the countryside.”

taken from the article “Farming endangers prehistoric roads” by Norman Hammond
in the Times
timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,61-1818469,00.html

The survey was jointly carried out by English Heritage, the Environment Agency and Somerset County Council, and will be reported in detail in the November issue of British Archaeology.

Folklore

Trewardreva Fogou
Fogou

John Wilmet, 78 years old, began by telling me the following tale about an allee couvert: “William Murphy, who married my sister, once went to the pisky-house at Bosahan with a surveyor and the two of them heard such unearthly noises in it that they came running home in great excitement, saying they had heard the piskies.”

This is surely the place to which this anecdote (from Evans Wentz’s ‘Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries’ 1911) refers, as if you look on the map it is between Bosahan farm and Bosahan quarry.

Folklore

Men-An-Tol
Holed Stone

At the Men-an-Tol there is supposed to be a guardian fairy or pixy who can make miraculous cures. And my mother knew of an actual case in which a changeling was put through the stone in order to get the real child back. It seems that evil pixies changed children, and that the pixy at the Men-an-Tol being good, could, in opposition, undo their work.

‘The Fairy Faith in Celtic Countries’ p179, W Y Evans Wentz, 1911.

Folklore

Kingsdown Camp
Enclosure

According to the Somerset Historic Environment record this is a small Iron Age enclosure which was refortified in the late first or second century. Leslie Grinsell mentions it in his ‘Folklore of Prehistoric Sites in Britain’ – it is said to be the site of a fierce battle between two kings, at which both of them died. A large barrow (partially destroyed some time pre 1791) was said to be where the many slain in the battle were interred.

Folklore

Burley Camp
Hillfort

Unusually it seems that when the Normans built their fancy 2-motte and bailey castle here, they didn’t utilise the earthworks that already existed: the defenses of the Iron Age Burley Camp.

Leslie Grinsell’s source hinted that a crock of gold is buried here, but that anyone who attempts to dig for it is scared off by the eldritch thunder and lightning that ensue.

(’Folklore of Prehistoric Sites in Britain, 1976)

Folklore

Marden Henge (and Hatfield Barrow)
Henge

Weirdness local to Marden – a settlement (now a house) lay to the east of the henge, called ‘Puckshipton’. John Chandler (see link below) says this means ‘The Goblin’s Cattle Shed’. What must have happened here for the place to acquire this name? Or is it actually related to the henge itself (probably an ideal place for a goblin to corral his cattle). It is very close to the place where the Ridgeway crossed the River Avon (I take it at SU099577), a spot which was known as Wifelesford (’weevils’-ford’).

Wiltshire Community History website
wiltshire.gov.uk/community/getconcise.php?id=14