dumnonia

Saturday 26 September 2015

Spanish Main

“ Spanish Main ”


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O most of us the words “ Spanish Main ” conjure up visions of high-sterned carracks riding at anchor off a town of red-tiled, white-walled houses backed by a mountain wall ; of mule-trains trudging through the Darien forest laden with small, flat, heavy boxes containing treasure torn from the Incas. Mosquitoes and heat; cruelty and courage. Drake, Cortez, Morgan, Venables. Cartagena, Nombre de Dios, Panama. We forget—or perhaps, have never realized—that the motive behind all those wild, fantastic doings, the magnet that drew Europeans to those shores, was trade. But so it was—and it was the desire for trade that led men from the British Isles to establish the tiny settlement on the Bay of Honduras on the inhospitable, uninhabited coast between the Captain-generalships of Yucatan and Guatemala.
For years the Spanish had been exporting dye-woods from Campeche on the Gulf of Mexico. Then a British buccaneer captured a vessel thus laden and, after having burned much of this disappointing cargo for firewood, discovered to his astonishment that it was
worth £100 a ton. The news went round, and many of the dubious sea-faring characters that infested the Caribbean Sea in those days tried to share this unexpected treasure from the swamps of Campeche, until the Spaniards learned of it and drove them out. Forced to seek elsewhere, and with a natural liking for sheltered and concealed waters and a contempt for the perils of navigation, the British logwood hunters presently established themselves at the mouth of the principal river running into the immense lagoon that lies behind the coral reef (second longest in the world) which extends from the base of the peninsula of Yucatan southward to within twenty miles of the coast of Guatemala.
The first inhabitants of the Settlement were part-time foresters.
They plied this more peaceful trade only when the dangers of the hurricane season rendered maritime enterprise—shall we call it?-—unprofitable. Even in the early days of the 18th century they were a rough lot; Captain Nathaniel Uring roundly declared that “ the settlement on the Bay of Honduras is entirely composed of criminals, fugitives from justice or men of desperate fortune.” But tough they had to be, for Britain, and even Jamaica (herself no Sunday-school in those days), disowned them. The Spaniards, though they had never made the
Measuring a mahogany tree before felling (below) and the barbecue—or platform of sticks—on which the feller stands (left)
Courtesy of the Timber Development Assn. and H.M.S.O.
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worth £100 a ton. The news went round, and many of the dubious sea-faring characters that infested the Caribbean Sea in those days tried to share this unexpected treasure from the swamps of Campeche, until the Spaniards learned of it and drove them out. Forced to seek elsewhere, and with a natural liking for sheltered and concealed waters and a contempt for the perils of navigation, the British logwood hunters presently established themselves at the mouth of the principal river running into the immense lagoon that lies behind the coral reef (second longest in the world) which extends from the base of the peninsula of Yucatan southward to within twenty miles of the coast of Guatemala.
The first inhabitants of the Settlement were part-time foresters.
They plied this more peaceful trade only when the daggers of the hurricane season rendered maritime enterprise—shall we call it?-—unprofitable. Even in the early days of the 18th century they were a rough lot; Captain Nathaniel Uring roundly declared that “ the settlement on the Bay of Honduras is entirely composed of criminals, fugitives from justice or men of desperate fortune.” But tough they had to be, for Britain, and even Jamaica (herself no Sunday-school in those days), disowned them. The Spaniards, though they had never made the
249
T

St. Keyna, Virgin

October 8
St. Keyna, Virgin
BRAGHAN, prince of part of Wales, who has left his name to Brecknockshire, was happy in an offspring of saints. The most famous were St. Canoc, who founded many monasteries in Ireland; and St. Keyna, surnamed by the Welch, The Virgin, who lived a recluse in a wood in Somersetshire, at a distance from her own country, near the town of Cainsham, which seems so called from her, and stands on the Avon not far from Bristol. Spiral stones in the figure of serpents have been found in that country, which some of the people pretend to have been serpents turned into stones by her prayers. 1 They seem either petrifactions or sports of nature in uncommon crystallizations in a mineral soil. St. Keyna is said to have died in her own country in the fifth or sixth century. Many places in Wales are filled with monuments of the great veneration which was formerly paid to this saint. See her Acts in Capgrave, Alford, &c.
Saint Keyna, Virgin. October 8. Rev. Alban Butler. 1866. Volume X: October. The Lives of the Saints

mahogany tree

mahogany tree



Measuring a mahogany tree before felling (below) and the barbecue—or platform of sticks—on which the feller stands (left)
Courtesy of the Timber Development Assn. and H.M.S.O.
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worth £100 a ton. The news went round, and many of the dubious sea-faring characters that infested the Caribbean Sea in those days tried to share this unexpected treasure from the swamps of Campeche, until the Spaniards learned of it and drove them out. Forced to seek elsewhere, and with a natural liking for sheltered and concealed waters and a contempt for the perils of navigation, the British logwood hunters presently established themselves at the mouth of the principal river running into the immense lagoon that lies behind the coral reef (second longest in the world) which extends from the base of the peninsula of Yucatan southward to within twenty miles of the coast of Guatemala.
The first inhabitants of the Settlement were part-time foresters.
They plied this more peaceful trade only when the dangers of the hurricane season rendered maritime enterprise—shall we call it?-—unprofitable. Even in the early days of the 18th century they were a rough lot; Captain Nathaniel Uring roundly declared that “ the settlement on the Bay of Honduras is entirely composed of criminals, fugitives from justice or men of desperate fortune.” But tough they had to be, for Britain, and even Jamaica (herself no Sunday-school in those days), disowned them. The Spaniards, though they had never made the
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Measuring a mahogany tree before felling (below) and the barbecue—or platform of sticks—on which the feller stands (left)
Courtesy of the Timber Development Assn. and H.M.S.O.
tmpd546-3
worth £100 a ton. The news went round, and many of the dubious sea-faring characters that infested the Caribbean Sea in those days tried to share this unexpected treasure from the swamps of Campeche, until the Spaniards learned of it and drove them out. Forced to seek elsewhere, and with a natural liking for sheltered and concealed waters and a contempt for the perils of navigation, the British logwood hunters presently established themselves at the mouth of the principal river running into the immense lagoon that lies behind the coral reef (second longest in the world) which extends from the base of the peninsula of Yucatan southward to within twenty miles of the coast of Guatemala.
The first inhabitants of the Settlement were part-time foresters.
They plied this more peaceful trade only when the daggers of the hurricane season rendered maritime enterprise—shall we call it?-—unprofitable. Even in the early days of the 18th century they were a rough lot; Captain Nathaniel Uring roundly declared that “ the settlement on the Bay of Honduras is entirely composed of criminals, fugitives from justice or men of desperate fortune.” But tough they had to be, for Britain, and even Jamaica (herself no Sunday-school in those days), disowned them. The Spaniards, though they had never made the

Mohammedan

SHOPS



MAN’S TRADE AND INDUSTRY
SHOPS
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G.P.A.
A WALKING COFFEE-SHOP IN CAIRO
Refreshment is an important branch of business. This travelling Egyptian coffee-seller does a
roaring trade in the streets in spite of the none-too-clean appearance of his cup; and pots.
The lady will wait for privacy before she lifts her veil to drink,
since Mohammedan women are strictly forbidden to unveil their faces in the presence of their male folk. 

FOREST COLONY

FOREST COLONY



FOREST COLONY
smallest attempt to occupy or colonize the place, demanded their withdrawal on the astonishing grounds that the Pope had allotted to Spain all lands lying west of longitude 60°W. They harried the settlers without ceasing and with varying fortune until, on September 10th, 1798, the guns of H.M. Sloop of War Merlin and the gun-flats improvised by the Baymen of Belize beat off-—or scared off—a formidable armada launched against them by the Captain-general of Yucatan (who rejoiced in the fine old Spanish name of O’Niel), and settled the business, until it was revived in recent years by the Republic of Guatemala.*
LOGWOOD declined in price, but long before this happened the settlers of Honduras had found other valuable products in the forest. First of these to be exploited was mahogany. Swie tenia Mahogani and Swietenia Macro phylla, of that great timber-yielding family the Meliacae, had the good fortune to catch the fancy of the well-to-do public. The Honduras mahogany is a splendid-looking tree, heavily buttressed. It attains a girth of fourteen or fifteen feet above the buttresses and a clear timber height from the top of the buttresses to the first branch of fifty feet or more. Tn tropical mixed forests of the kind in which mahogany grows, nothing of the nature of a pure stand of one species is ever discovered. Mahogany is slightly gregarious and where one tree is found there are usually others
O J    O    J    o O    .    .    J
within a relatively short distance. But the winged seeds, somewhat similar to large sycamore seeds, are evidently effective in securing dispersion, and trees are widely scattered throughout the forest. Two hundred mahogany trees to a square mile—less than one to three acres—is good mahogany forest.
Mahogany is a light wood and the obvious way to get it out of the forest is by floating it down a river. Unfortunately, all forest near the rivers has been logged since early days. Until comparatively recently the tree was ruthlessly over-cut, and where too high a proportion of the secd-bearers has been felled, mahogany has failed to regenerate, so that it must now be sought many miles from the natural routes of extraction.
In the old days, trees were felled only within a few hundred feet of the rivers and hauled bodily to the waterside by slaves. Later, cattle were called upon to do the hauling, dragging wooden sledges running over sticks placed at intervals across the path. This technique is still occasionally followed for hauls up to a mile when the first rains have provided lubrication, and is known as “ sliding.’” “ Sliding Camp ” is a name that appears frequently on the map of British Honduras.
THE next development was the introduction of wheeled trucks. These could be employed only in the dry season and so the operations began to conform to the pattern in use today. A five-mile haul is about the limit for cattle which are usually worked at night for the sake of coolness. A thousand logs was a good season’s work whth cattle, and even now “Thousandth Log” day is celebrated in the logging camps with a holiday on which the management is expected to provide rum freely, though the target of the operation, using tractors, may be three, five or seven thousand logs. For nowadays the crawler-track tractor hauls the logs in every big operation and it is only in the smaller ones that cattle are still occasionally used. Apart from everything else, the cattle food has been over-cut and is no longer plentiful; so much labour is required to cut and bring it in that the cost of cattle haulage has greatly increased.
The elite of the modern logging camp are the tractor drivers and the best of them handle their machines with a skill and nerve that 1 find admirable. A payable tractor haul may extend to sixteen miles or so, and we now can say that almost all dry and reasonably level parts of the Colony can be logged, for little of it lies at a greater distance than that
* How the Braye Baymen Saved Belize was told in the EMPIRE YOUTH ANNUAL, 1943.

natural weather

natural weather


mick gambol

SEA EROSION AT PAKEFIELD, NEAR LOWESTOFT
The sea has cut away the cliff until houses—once some distance from the cliff edge—have collapsed
Crown Copyright Reserved
the weak places in a rock or even in a brick wall are penetrated by wind and rain, and the effects of such prolonged exposure to the elements can be seen in the pictures above.
Frost has its strongest effect when porous rocks have had their cavities and cracks filled with water—for instance, after heavy rain. During severe frost the water, turning to ice, expands and exerts great pressure, widening crevices and producing ice crystals even in microscopic cavities. When it is remembered that water increases its volume by more than one-tenth in freezing, it will be seen how powerful this pressure can be. When the thaw sets in, mineral crystals, particles of rock, and even pebbles or large stones which have been loosened are dislodged by gravity, wind, or rain. Anyone who has noticed the spongy nature of a gravel path when first the thaw sets in aftei Dost will realize how much the top crust of trodden gravel has been lifted by the ice underneath. In regions of prolonged winter frosts, as in the mountains of Switzerland, the effects are not apparent until spring comes and the ice in the lower parts of the mountains melts. Then blocks of stone, which have been cut off the mountain walls by the ice, tumble into the valleys below.
2. Erosion. This word, taken literally, means ‘eating away’. It is impossible to separate erosion and weathering completely, since the sand-blast of the desert and the driving rain of a storm are eroding no less than weathering forces; but it is usual to restrict the term erosion to actions which more closely fit the exact meaning of gnawing away. Rain, running water, waves, and moving ice are the main agents of erosion. The great world problem of erosion in relation to human settlement and agriculture is dealt with separately {see Soil Erosion).
Running water erodes by the agency of particles of sand (as in a streamlet), pebbles (as at the bottom of a rather slow river), or large stones (as in the case of a vast mountain torrent). Sometimes, in swiftly running streams, large stones carve out ‘pot-holes’ even in hard rock. The sea uses stones as one of its weapons in its assault upon shores and cliffs. Storm waves hurl tons of water with enormous force against the

Augustine – 1st Archbishop of Canterbury

Augustine – 1st Archbishop of Canterbury



Augustine – 1st Archbishop of Canterbury

“Your words are fair, but of doubtful meaning; I cannot forsake what I have so long believed. But as you have come from far we will not molest you; you may preach, and gain as many as you can to your religion” Greeting of King Ethelbert, Isle of Thanet, to Augustine in the Summer of 597
Details of Augustine’s life are scarce. Believed to have been a pupil of Felix, bishop of Messana, he became a monk and later Prior of St Andrew’s in Rome. He was sent by Pope Gregory to lead a party of around 30 monks to bring England (such as it was) under the influence of the Roman world. The journey was halted at one point, the monks losing their nerve and returning to Rome, before successfully landing at Ebbsfleet in 597. Received cautiously by the King of Kent, Ethelbert, Augustine managed to estbalish a community of monks based first at St Martin’s church, later transferring to the site of the present Cathedral.
Augustine struggled to establish his authority within the British Isles and did not bring to completion Gregory’s plan to form an English church based on two provinces and twelve bishops.
He died on May 26th, now remembered as his feast day, but the year of his death is uncertain, between 604 and 609. He was buried at what is now called St Augustine’s Abbey.
Research by Jenny Childs and Steve Empson
Detailed biography:
Augustine (? – c604)
St Augustine or Austin, of Canterbury (Evangelizer of England – as distinct from Roman Britain; feast day 26 May in England, 27 May in the RC Church since 1969 & outside England now). ‘Bishop [or Archbishop] of the English’ (as consecrated); ‘Apostle of the English’ (originally a description of Pope Gregory).
Italian by birth.

d. May c604; some reports put it as late as 609. Buried at the Monastery of St Peter and St Paul (afterwards known as St Augustine’s) Canterbury.
Ministry
Prior St Andrew’s Monastery Rome ? – ?; Leader 1st Mission to England 596-597; chosen by Pope Gregory I to lead between thirty and forty monks to Kent 596, departed 596, landed Summer 597 at Ebbsfleet and received in Thanet by Kentish K Ethelbert.
Archbishop of Canterbury 597- c604; Consecrated before his 1st arrival in England, possibly with the title ‘Bishop of the English’, possibly  at Arles, but also possibly after becoming established in England. The pallium  – the symbol of office – was sent from Rome by Pope Gregory I in 601.
His time as Archbishop coincided with with » Kings and Queens: Kent » Ethelbert 560? -616 » East Saxons » Sabert ? -616 » West Saxons » (Ceolric 592-97) » Ceolwulf 597-611 » South Saxons » ? » Mercia » Crida or Creoda or Cearl 593-626 » Northumbria » Ethelfrid 593-617 » East Angles » ? (Redwald ? -627) » Popes » Gregory I 590-604 » (Sabinianus 604-06) »
Known writings:
helped Ethelbert to draft the earliest Anglo-Saxon written laws to survive.
Firsts:
1st Abp of Canterbury.
Augustine – 1st Archbishop of Canterbury

Stonehenge itself

Stonehenge itself and Avebury Henge and Stone Circles are both the products of a long sequence of construction and modification


Concordat governing the location and construction of building for Ministry of Defence at Larkhill (As agreed with MPBW, Ancient Monuments Division) The Ministry of Defence have a requirement for a School of Artillery at Larkhill for as long as can be foreseen. In addition to the buildings now being erected, this Army Establishment may require further buildings or structures. However, it is the long term objective of the Ministry of Public Building and Works that no buildings or large tree plantings should be visible from Stonehenge. In furtherance of this objective, and to permit any necessary further development of the Army Establishment to be planned without further consultation on this aspect. It is agreed: a. On the Ministry of Defence owned land south of the line described in Annex A (but excluding Durrington Downs Farm where, however, MPBW shall be consulted about the siting and character of any replacements or additions), no new buildings or structures shall be erected except additions to existing buildings; these additions not to exceed 50 sq metres in area and 5 metres in height above ground level. All new building work shall be screened by trees if visible from Stonehenge. b. Any proposal for a building of more than 9 metres above ground level to be erected North of the line as described and which would not be completely hidden from Stonehenge by ground contours shall be the subject of specific agreement between the Departments. c. The Ministry of Defence will take no action which would increase the obtrusion of existing buildings and structures on the landscape as seen from Stonehenge. d. The Ministry of Defence will take account when considering requirements for new building in the Larkhill area, the effect which such development might have in prolonging the life of existing buildings which are visible from Stonehenge. Annexure ‘A’ to Concordat Building line following completion of building for the move of Manorbier From the limit of MOD property in the WEST the building line follows the Packway to the junction with the pathway to the cricket pavilion (at the Eastern end of the Shopping Centre). Thence, NORTH along this pathway past the Cricket pavilion to the junction with the School of Artillery Officers’ Mess approach which it follows NORTH (to the West of the Officers’ Mess) to the junction with GLOVER Road. Thence, EAST along GLOVE Road to the junction with the PACKWAY. Thence EAST along the PACKWAY to the junction with WOOD Road. Thence SOUTH along WOOD Road to the junction with POWNALL Road to the MOD Boundary. 286 Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Site Management Plan 2015 Appendices Appendix K Detailed archaeological description of the Stonehenge and Avebury WHS Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Evidence of Palaeolithic activity in the Avebury area is sparse, much of it on the clay with flints but with a presence now apparent around the headwaters of the River Kennet. Evidence at Cherhill, in Butler’s Field and in the area later occupied by Falkner’s Circle suggests a transient presence during the Later Mesolithic in the Avebury area with more sustained activity further down the Kennet valley around Newbury and Thatcham. The sockets for four very large Early Mesolithic posts (c 8,000 BC) were found on the site of the previous Stonehenge car park. Such monumental activity is exceptionally rare in Britain during the Mesolithic. On the spring line overlooked by what later became Vespasian’s Camp at Blick Mead, lithic and faunal evidence suggests a sustained or repeated large-scale presence throughout much of the Mesolithic. Earlier Neolithic (c 4000–3000 BC) The earliest ceremonial and funerary monuments in and around the Stonehenge portion of the WHS date from the Earlier Neolithic and include about a dozen long barrows (some of which were burial mounds) and Robin Hood’s Ball, a causewayed enclosure just outside the WHS. These monuments were built in within what was already by then a largely open, grassland environment. The Cursus (a long thin earthwork enclosure bounded by a ditch and bank) was constructed around 3,630–3,370 BC, and the Lesser Cursus (a smaller rectangular enclosure) was also built towards the end of this period. The years between about 3,700 and 3,300 BC saw the construction of a number of earthen long barrows and chambered tombs in the Avebury part of the WHS. Among the earliest are the chambered examples at West Kennet and Millbarrow. Unlike the earthen long barrows such as South Street and Horslip, that were built slightly later, both West Kennet and Millbarrow had a mortuary aspect to their use. A recent radiocarbon dating programme suggests that the causewayed enclosure at Windmill Hill was built within a few years of West Kennet Long Barrow, though the enclosure itself was preceded by earlier activity and it remained a focal point for deposition into the Early Bronze Age. Later Neolithic (3000–2200 BC) Stonehenge itself and Avebury Henge and Stone Circles are both the products of a long sequence of construction and modification. The construction of the small circular enclosure at Stonehenge was begun around 3,000 BC and a similar early phase of construction evident beneath the final henge bank at Avebury may date from around the same time. To the west of the Henge the Longstones enclosure was also constructed during this period, though its form echoes that of the much earlier enclosure on Windmill Hill. At Stonehenge the principal entrance was on the north-east side and a secondary one to the south. Around this time fifty-six circular pits, known as the ‘Aubrey Holes’ after their original discoverer John Aubrey (1626–1697), were dug inside the bank at Stonehenge. These once held either stout timber posts or stones, but when these rotted or were removed cremations were placed within them. The Avebury Henge ditch and bank seem to have been built c 2600 BC. The sequence of stone settings here is not firmly established but may have begun with the Cove and inner settings and been followed by the Outer Circle. Likewise the date of Falkner’s Circle is uncertain. The Sanctuary on Overton Hill and linked to Avebury by the West Kennet Avenue, represents another circular ceremonial monument, in this case built initially of timber posts which were subsequently replaced by sarsen stones. Neither the West Kennet nor the Beckhampton Avenues are well dated but appear to have been built after the Henge and Stone Circles towards the end of the Later Neolithic; while Silbury Hill was constructed between c 2400 BC and 2300 BC. The West Kennet Palisade Enclosures, which today survive only below ground, are also of Later Neolithic date. At Stonehenge the sequence of the erection, dismantling and re-erection of the stone settings (comprised of bluestones from the Preseli Hills in West Wales, sarsens and, in one case, old red sandstone) is complex and still the subject of some debate but recent parchmark evidence suggests that contra to previous suggestions the outer sarsen circle was once complete. Very few other megalithic stone structures exist which have the architectural and technical sophistication of Stonehenge. It was uniquely built using woodworking techniques which may have been used in timber structures of the period such as those at Durrington Walls and Woodhenge. To the east of Stonehenge, on Coneybury Hill, stood the smaller monument known as Coneybury Henge, while to the north-east stood the massive henge enclosure of Durrington Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Site Management Plan 2015 Appendices 287 Walls with the smaller Woodhenge situated close by to the south. The timber structures at Durrington Walls were constructed perhaps a generation earlier than the encircling bank and ditch which formed the henge enclosure. There original use appears to be associated with the remains of at least ten late Neolithic houses situated inside and just outside the area later encircled by Durrington Walls henge excavated as part of the Stonehenge Riverside Project. The excavators have suggested that they may be the surviving elements of a much larger village of many hundreds of houses in use at the time of the construction of the main sarsen phase of Stonehenge. This would make it the largest village in northwest Europe at that time. Stonehenge and Avebury would both have served as major ceremonial centres drawing large populations to the area both during their construction and subsequently. Recent evidence from stable isotope analysis suggests that some of the people visiting the site may have travelled considerable distances coming from well outside of the region. A deep shaft known as the Wilsford Shaft was excavated at this time, and continued in use until the Roman period. The open nature of the countryside was maintained by grazing animals. Early Bronze Age (c 2200–1600 BC) Hundreds of round barrows of various forms were raised during the Early Bronze Age at both Avebury and Stonehenge. The discovery of Beaker graves unmarked by any mounds next to naturally occurring sarsens to the north of the Avebury part of the WHS and at the foot of stones in the West Kennet Avenue show that barrows were not the only places of burial in the landscape at this time. At West Kennet there is clear evidence that the Earlier Neolithic tomb was deliberately blocked during the Later Neolithic and there is also evidence of Beaker period activity within the tomb. And the Stone settings within the Henge at Avebury were still being maintained and used. From their earliest construction Stonehenge and Avebury were individual components within landscapes in which the visual relationships between monuments and the contingent histories of particular places were important. There was a strong visual relationship between the round barrow cemeteries surrounding Stonehenge and Avebury and the pre-existing Later Neolithic monuments. This is perhaps more readily apparent today at Stonehenge with among others the King Barrow Ridge Barrows, the Cursus Barrows, the Normanton Down Barrows and the Winterbourne Stoke Barrows all built on prominent ridges within the landscape and situated in direct relationship to earlier monuments. In the Early Bronze Age Stonehenge was linked physically with the River Avon by the construction of an Avenue consisting of a pair of parallel banks and ditches. At the Avenue’s junction with the Avon at West Amesbury stood a small henge which appears to have contained a stone circle (both of which are of uncertain date), and from which the stones were subsequently removed. The construction of the portion of the Avenue stretching from Stonehenge Bottom to the north-eastern entrance to Stonehenge coincides with the path of what appear to be a series of parallel peri-glacial stripes. It has been suggested that the pre-existence of this natural feature, oriented as it is on the midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset may be the reason for the construction of not only the later Avenue but of Stonehenge itself. At some point in the Earlier Bronze Age or possibly earlier a large wooden palisade situated running to the west and north of Stonehenge would have had a transformative effect on the landscape dividing it up in an entirely new way, disrupting visual relationships between monuments and possibly restricting access to some areas and monuments for certain groups. Later Bronze Age (1600–1000 BC) Some of the round barrows in both landscapes have Middle Bronze Age cremations but no major new monuments were built at this time. Over much of the Marlborough Downs there are Bronze Age field systems which post date Beaker period deposits and on Overton Down pre date a number of Late Bronze Age settlements which then adapted and modified the existing field systems. There is evidence for a diverse range of activities in the area around Stonehenge during the Later Bronze Age including formalised settlements and field systems in some areas of the Stonehenge landscape. Linear banks and ditches, such as those across Wilsford Down and Lake Down, formally divided up the landscape. Although they encroached as far as the Cursus field systems are absent from the immediate area surrounding Stonehenge itself. Iron Age (c 800 BC– AD 43) At Avebury the principal evidence for late Iron Age occupation comes from the hillforts beyond the WHS, such as Oldbury and the more distant Barbury. On the Marlborough Downs the pattern of Late Bronze Age fields and settlements continued into the Early Iron Age and the settlements continued in use among the fields on the higher downland. But while major enclosures such as these indicate a significant Iron Age presence in the region, little evidence of Iron Age settlement or agriculture is apparent in the Avebury area. Likewise there is little evidence for the continued ceremonial status of Stonehenge itself in later prehistory. The farming activities which were practised within the WHS in the Iron 288 Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Site Management Plan 2015 Appendices Age have left little evidence, though an impressive hill fort was constructed near Amesbury, now known as Vespasian’s Camp. Roman (c 43–410 AD) The occurrence of Romano-British artefacts at Stonehenge itself shows that the monument was visited and used at that time; recent excavations have shown that a ‘shaft’ was dug into the monument during this period. However the pattern of these artefacts suggests that Stonehenge was already partly ruinous. Farmsteads and small un-enclosed towns of the Roman period are known across Salisbury Plain. Within the WHS itself, a small Roman building interpreted as a rural shrine has been excavated near to the Cuckoo Stone and a short distance to the south a Bronze Age barrow became a focal point for Roman burials. At Avebury a Roman ladder settlement of 2nd to 3rd century date lay immediately south of Silbury Hill close to Swallowhead springs and the Winterbourne and beside the Roman road running west from Cunetio to Bath. The settlement’s size and location, together with the presence of a series of shafts containing what may be votive deposits, suggest something more than a mere farming settlement. Geophysical survey has revealed what may be either a mausoleum or a shrine of the period. Evidence also exists of substantial buildings and at least one burial on the western slopes of Waden Hill beside the Winterbourne. To the east on Overton Hill rare Roman barrows were built beside the road of the same period. Saxon (c AD 410–1066) There is evidence of an early Saxon settlement at Avebury itself, on the site of the current visitor car park, together with pagan Saxon barrows and other burials reusing the Bronze Age cemetery on Overton Hill. From the late Saxon period onwards there is documentary as well as archaeological evidence of the development of the landscape. Saxon charters provide evidence of the estates which came to form the medieval parishes and identify various features which the boundaries followed or crossed, including the Ridgeway which cuts across the prehistoric and Roman field systems on Overton Down. Green Street leading out of Avebury to the east was probably part of an important east-west route at this period if not before. Evidence for the Saxon origins of Avebury church is still apparent in its fabric. In the late Saxon period the summit of Silbury Hill was remodelled and a wooden fortification constructed, possibly to serve as a lookout post. Amesbury was the centre for a widespread royal estate during the Saxon period, and the abbey was founded in AD 979. It is probable that the town itself grew up around these establishments but little is known of the way in which the surrounding landscape was utilised. However, the remains of several Saxon sunken-featured buildings were revealed at the Countess East site which may have been an early Saxon settlement which later shifted to the town of Amesbury. Stonehenge itself may have become an execution site during this period; a decapitated Saxon man was buried around AD 645 at the monument. It is even possible that the name, Stonehenge from the Saxon stone and heng may refer to this function, or may mean that, to Saxon eyes, the great stone trilithons resembled a gallows. Alternatively it may simply refer to the extraordinary hanging lintels of the Stone Circle. Medieval to Modern (AD 1066 onwards) In the 12th century the alien cell of a Benedictine priory was established at Avebury, probably on, or close to the site of the present Avebury Manor. A documented run of bad harvests in the early 14th century, which resulted in the desertion of the downland farmstead on Fyfield Down, followed by the Black Death later marked the end of early medieval expansion. Marginal arable reverted to pasture and there is evidence of settlement contraction or shift in most of the settlements along the Kennet, including Avebury itself and Avebury Trusloe. From the 14th century onwards the practice of stone burial reduced many of the Avebury megalithic settings significantly. This process accelerated during the post-medieval period with Stukeley recording a period of particularly rampant stone destruction in the 1720s; though archaeological evidence suggests that the destruction may have started as early as the late 15th century. The earliest surviving parts of Avebury Manor date to the mid-16th century. It is at about this time and during the 17th century that parts of the common downland pasture on West Hill, Windmill Hill and Knoll Down were enclosed. Most of the open fields were not enclosed until the 18th century, but a notable exception, still extant, was the enclosure of an area just east of the West Kennet Avenue. Parts of the meadowland along the valley floor at Avebury were enclosed in the 17th century, and at various points along the floor of the valley, at Avebury and around the foot of Silbury Hill. At West Overton and Avebury there are the earthworks of managed water meadow systems some probably originating in the 17th century and surviving in use until the 19th or early 20th century. Parliamentary enclosure occurred in 1795 at Avebury and in 1813 to 1814 at Winterbourne Monkton and the Overton group of parishes, resulting in the creation of large rectangular fields, many bounded by quickset hedges, alongside the more limited areas of old enclosure. The Napoleonic Wars saw a re-expansion of arable, and this became even more marked Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Site Management Plan 2015 Appendices 289 around the time of the First World War and then again after the Second World War when much remaining downland was ploughed up. In the post-medieval and modern era there have been elements of conscious design in the development of the landscape in and around Avebury, reflecting different attitudes to the concept of landscape. This includes the 17th century designed parkland belonging to Avebury Manor and the tree clumps, known locally as ‘hedgehogs’, on the barrows along the skyline of the Ridgeway scarp east of Avebury. In the 1920s and 1930s Alexander Keiller embarked on his remarkable campaign of ‘megalithic landscape gardening’. This not only opened up the interior of the Henge, removing a number of buildings, but also involved restoration and reconstruction of substantial parts of Avebury Stone Circles and the West Kennet Avenue – making them far more visible features in the landscape than they had been for hundreds of years. During the medieval period most of the Stonehenge part of the WHS reverted to downland used for the grazing of large flocks of sheep. In the 18th century Stukeley recorded much of the landscape at the point when arable agriculture was progressively expanding. However, it was the vast expanses of open grassland and the low land values which made the Plain suitable for acquisition for military training from 1897 onwards. Since then, the expansion and reconfiguration of military installations has been the most conspicuous use of the southern fringe of Salisbury Plain Training Area, including the northern part of the WHS. However, the acquisition of the Plain by the military has ensured the survival of huge numbers of archaeological sites and large areas of chalk grassland, as it was not subjected to intensive agricultural techniques. Until the 18th century the extent of woodland around Stonehenge seems to have been minimal. The clumps of trees on ridgelines which we now associate with this landscape were a product of planting in the 18th and 19th centuries. There are a number of listed buildings within the WHS and also the remains of an important park and garden at Amesbury Abbey, which once stretched as far as King Barrow Ridge. It incorporated the planting on Vespasian’s Camp and the ‘Nile Clumps’ which date to this period. Provided by Dr Nick Snashall, Archaeologist (Stonehenge and Avebury WHS), National Trust

Brychan

Brychan – father of keyna ?


Listed in the Life of Saint Nectan are, by his wife, Gwladys:
Adwen, Canauc (Cynog), Cleder (Clether), Dilic (Illick), Endelient (Endelienta), Helie, Johannes (Sion), Iona, Juliana (Ilud), Kenhender (Cynidr), Keri (Curig), Mabon (Mabyn), Menfre (Menefrewy), Merewenne (Marwenna), Morewenna (Morwenna), Nectanus (Nectan), Tamalanc, Tedda (Tetha), Wencu (Gwencuff, Gwengustle, name of Saint Nennocha), Wenheden (Enoder), Wenna (Gwen), Wensent, Wynup (Gwenabwy) and Yse (Issey).

According to Robert Hunt, of the holy children that settled in Cornwall, we learn that the following gave their names to Cornish churches
  1. Johannes at St Ive
  2. Endelient at St Endellion
  3. Menfre at St Minver
  4. Tedda at St Teath
  5. Mabon at St Mabyn
  6. Merewenne at Marhamchurch
  7. Wenna at St Wenn
  8. Keyne at St Keyne
  9. Yse at St Issey
  10. Morewenna at Morwenstow
  11. Cleder at St Clether
  12. Keri at Egloskerry
  13. Helie at Egloshayle
  14. Adwen at Advent
  15. Lanent at Lelant
Brychan – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

KING BLADUD



KING BLADUD



The figure is in two parts,and the head, older than the body, was easily detached. From this Janice Tindall removed a layer of recent blue oil paint  presumably depicting  woad. Under  this was a series of repainted layers flesh coloured. I found red paint in the recesses of the robes. I extended these areas with a casein based paint so that it was clearly obvious from across the Kings Bath  . The niche was conserved using the lime method and I made the new apex stone where the crutches of the healed.used to be hung. This I capped with the cast lead cover dated 1982. Janice Tindall repainted the lettered panel beneath the niche that reads
BLADUD SON OF LUDHUDIBRAS/EIGHTH KING OF THE BRITANS/FROM BRUTE, A GREAT PHILOSOPHER/ AND MATHEMATICIAN BRED AT/ATHENS AND RECORDED THE FIRST/DISCOVERER AND FOUNDER OF/THESE BATHS EIGHT HUNDRED/SIXTY THREE YEARS BEFORE/CHRIST. THAT IS TWO THOUSAND/FIVE HUNDRED SIXTY TWO YEARS/TO THE PRESENT YEAR 1699/
Bottom left: Drawing  by Thomas Johnson shows the King’s Bath in 1675. Bladud’s niche supporting abandoned  crutches  seen on the left. Above.  Excavation of the Queens Bath 1879 note the rear of Bladud’s niche and the 

Rud Hud Hudibras

Rud Hud Hudibras (Welsh: Run baladr bras) was a legendary king of the Britons as recounted by Geoffrey of Monmouth. He was the son of King Leil and ruled during a civil war.
During the waning years of Leil’s reign, the kingdom of the Britons became unstable, and civil war broke out. Rud Hud Hudibras became king after his father’s death and reigned for 39 years, ending the civil war and restoring peace to the kingdom. During his reign, he founded Kaerreint, later renamed Canterbury by the Angles. He is also said to have founded Kaerguenit (Winchester) and Paladur Castle (Shaftesbury). He was succeeded by his son Bladud.
Geoffrey places Rud Hud Hudibras’ reign during the time Capys was king in Alba Longa and Haggai, Amos, Joel, and Azariah were prophesying in Israel. Haggai began his ministry around 520 BC, whilst Amos is said to have prophesied during the reigns of Uzziah of Judah and Jeroboam II, probably around 760 BC.
Rud Hud Hudibras – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia