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LAMBOROUGH
BANKS LONG BARROW SP 095108
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Not far from a footpath, this ruined long barrow
in Lamborough Banks covert is securely walled off from plough land.
Opened in 1854 and now a ruin, it is still huge 270 ft. It is
overgrown with brambles etc but it looks as if the trees growing
out of it have been chopped down. There¹s a standing stone at one
end perhaps a closing stone. In his l925 "Long Barrows of the
Cotswolds," O.G.S. Crawford says that it was once larger and that
bits had been recently chipped off this stone. According to my map
there is something described as a "mound" not far also in the same
wood.
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THE
HOAR STONE, Duntisbourne Abbots. SO 96490659
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Just outside Cirencester park on the hills overlooking
the valley of Duntisbourne Abbots is the remains of a long barrow.
At the east end stands the Hoar Stone, with two smaller fallen stones.
In the middle of the low mound is another big fallen stone, partly
covering a smaller stone. Excavated in l806, the barrow has lost
its original shape. The growing corn and over grown site make an
autumn or winter visit the best. This is no 14 in Old Stones of
the Cotswolds by D.P. Sullivan (Reardon). These may be the hoar
stones of which it is said that they run round the field when they
hear the nearby church clock strike the hour.
"A few days since a large oblong British or Danish barrow was
opened in the parish of Duntisbourne Abbots.. in which was found
a kistvaen or cromlech, containing about eight or nine bodies of
different ages, many of the bones of which, and the teeth, were
entire
.. The largest stone which has long been known in the
country by the name of the Horse Stone is of the kind of Grey Withers
or Stonehenge.. " Gentleman's Magazine 1806, part 11, p 971.
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JACKBARROW
monument, Duntisbourne Abbots. SO 971078 (Originally
SO 958071)
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The Jackbarrow long barrow was destroyed in the nineteenth century
and most of its stones are probably in the paving of Jackbarrow
Farm¹s stables. But, in a graceful acknowledgement of the dead
in a sacred site, the bones were reburied in Duntisbourne Abbots
churchyard under some of the original barrow megaliths. The tomb
is between two yew trees at the back of the churchyard, towards
the left, if you are facing the church entrance.
Pagans (who don¹t like Christianity muscling in on their people)
may be less happy about the stone cross and the inscription from
St John¹s gospel (Ch X1 v.23) "Jesus saith unto her,
Thy brother shall rise again." Even so, it¹s maybe better
than the bones being stored in a museum basement. Some cracking
concrete (perhaps to keep the cross up) added sometime in the last
century has made this tomb look a mess.
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HIGH
CROSS, ELKSTONE SO 133966
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Up
against a field wall, crowned with ivy, is a triangular stone. According
to Old Stones of the Cotswolds by D P Sullivan (Reardon) this may
be a standing stone, which was once in a nearby field, now removed
to the wall. Originally it may have been part of a now vanished
long barrow. Possibly once a boundary stone but no longer marked
as such on my map. The holes may be where a milestone metal notice
was attached.
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THE
GIANTS STONE, BISLEY. SO 9177 0611 [BACK
TO TOP]
Only two small stones are left today. In 1883 G B Witts reported:
The barrow has been removed, or nearly so, leaving some of
the stones which formed the chambers, especially a large one locally
known as the Giants Stone. By 1920 this large stone
had disappeared. Take Hayhedge lane and continue along it when the
tarmac stops. On the left is a small triangular pasture just before
the footpath lane on the left. On the side of the pasture furthest
from the footpath are the pitiful remnant of the Giants Stone
long barrow. Invisible from the lane visible in winter from
the field side. No 11 in Old Stones of the Cotswolds.
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THE LONG STONE, STAUNTON SO 55931205
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A
tall pointed stone at the side of the Gloucester to Monmouth rd
where tracks through the Forest of Dean meet. Tradition says that
if it is pricked by a pin on the dot of midnight, it bleeds. Unlike
many roadside standing stone, this escaped nineteenth century roadmakers
in search of rubble.
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CAMP
BARROW NORTH AND CAMP BARROW SOUTH, THE CAMP, SO 9137 0908 AND SO
9138 0902
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Both are south of The Camp village and in the parish
of Miserden close to the road from Bisley. Camp Barrow North is
identifiably a long barrow with several large slabs of the entrance
of one of the chambers visible. Camp Barrow South, possibly a round
barrow rather than another long barrow, is so close that I could
not really distinguish between the two. I visited in rather a hurry
and the nettles were high. I will try to go back in winter when
it is clearer. Not far off at SO 9300 0890 east of Honeycombe Farm,
just near the road with a footpath sign, is another long barrow
destroyed by the plough – now only the faintest mound is visible.
Unless we pay farmers a fair price for preserving the less visible
sites, the plough’s destruction will go on. IN “Archeological Handbook
of the County of Gloucester” in 1883 G.B. Witts wrote: “A great
number of human skeletons have at various times been dug up near
the village of Camp.”
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CRIPPETS
OR SHURDINGTON BARROW, COBERLEY. SO 9342 1737
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A surprisingly high long barrow made into a landscape feature by
Scots pines planted on it in l890, just off a footpath. Planting
up barrow protects from the plough, even tree roots destroy the
barrow features. The area is still called Barrow piece. At the east
end, which was excavated before l779, a flat stone is all that is
visible now. In “Archeological Handbook of the county of Gloucester”
of 1883 G.B. Witts wrotethat the early excavator “uncovered a cromlech
in which was found a skeleton and several article of which no satisfactory
account can now obtained.
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THE
WHITTLESTONE, LOWER SWELL. SP 1730 2554 [BACK
TO TOP]
This originally stood at SP 1734 2565 about 200 yards from the church
and was known as the Whistle stone. The folk lore tale was “When
the Whistlestone hears Stow clock (a mile off) strike 12, it goes
down to Lady-well (and the hill’s foot) to drink.” It was said that
it could not be moved by human hand. When a farmer proved this wrong,
the stone was given safe harbour in the vicarage paddock by the
Rev. David Royce. Now it stands near the village hall with a little
notice. Without the help of the vicar, it would probably have been
broken up to make roads or a local rockery.
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THE
HOARSTONE, LOWER SWELL SP 17022489
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In the middle of a ploughed field about
half a mile from the Whittlestone. Not far from the Lower Swell
long barrow and the two long barrows in Upper Swell. There is
no sign of a long barrow mound so this is said to be just a megalith
with no prehistoric interest. Local tradition says a farmer tried
to move it, but he found it went eight feet into the ground and
the pulling tackle broke.
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THE
TIBBLESTONE SO 9633 3383 [BACK TO TOP]
This is in all probability the very stone that gave its name to
the Teobaldestan hundred and marked the meeting place of this Anglo
Saxon administration unit of one hundred hides. Marking boundaries
with standing stones (existing prehistoric ones or ones placed there)
was common Anglo Saxon practice. They are often found as boundary
features near tracks and roads. Other Saxon boundary markers were
ditches, large trees or trees with crucifixes on them, streams,
pools, and prehistoric burial mounds. In a world without maps, it
was necessary to orientate by visible features on the ground. The
Tibblestone looks as if it has been shaped. It was discovered under
the soil in l948 by Mr C. J. Lucy the then owner of Teddington Cross
garage. Now it's been placed on the garage lawn and is surrounded
by more modern and less durable road signs. It looks odd there but,
as it owes its resurrection to the garage, why not! Folklore says
the stone landed here when a giant that lived on Dixton Hill was
throwing rocks at the ships in the Severn seven miles away. This
particular stone fell short, because he lost his footing on the
side of the hill.
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BELAS
KNAPP, SUDELEY. SP 02092554 [BACK TO TOP]
For once excavation was not destruction. This long barrow was reconstructed
by the Ministry of Work in l929 - thus leaving us a notable monument.
The horned entrance is a false façade without any tomb though
with deposited bones of a young man and five children (possibly later).
There are tombs at the far end and either side, both the latter having
obstruction stones. The parish boundary of Winchcombe runs next to
this long barrow. For the most enjoyment walk from Cleeve Common,
through the summer butterflies, towards the long barrow which is visible
far off. The other approach from the steep wooded escarpment is less
enjoyable but more authentic since the long barrow, just down from
the top of the escarpment was probably originally in woodland.
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KIFTSGATE
STONE, WESTON SUB EDGE. SP 1351 3898 [BACK
TO TOP]
At this stone was held the hundred court of the Anglo Saxons, a moot
or meeting place. The stone may have preceded it by thousands of years
since the Saxons often took existing standing stones and barrow as
boundary marks (see the Tibblestone). It is not far from Dover's Hill,
the place where the first ever English Olimpicks were held from 1612
(see my book section for an account of these games). Park at Dover
Hill and walk to Kingcomb crossroads. Turn right round the edge of
Weston park wood. Ignore the gate leading to Weston Park farm and
walk onwards towards the till you see a gap in the hedge on your right
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THE
LOUSEY STONE, RANDWICK SO 828 0685 approx
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Folkloric rather than prehistoric. A marker stone of some kind on
the old track known as Robbers' Way. Two low for a traditional gatepost,
it nevertheless has two holes drilled in to it which have been used
perhaps as a low barrier of some kind. Villagers gave it this name
as it is the traditional place to scratch. Not far from Randwick long
barrow at SO 8250 0690, a long barrow difficult to make out because
the land is so extensively quarried. The Lousey stone is not marked
on the Explorer map.
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ATHELSTAN'S
STONE, LA HORE STONE AND THE ZUNT STONE, KEMBLE. ST 985 991, SP 000
003 and SU 011 986
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A
13th century copy of an Anglo-Saxon charter of King Athelstan, dated
931, giving land to Malmesbury Abbey, mentions "la hore stone,"
as one of the boundaries. This stone was probably at SP 000 003
where the parish boundary moves away from the Foss Way - according
to Saxon Charters of Gloucestershire by G.B. Grundy, 1935. It is
no longer visible.
But John Yonge Akerman, writing in l856, identified the hoar stone
as the mounting stone that stands a few feet away from what was
originally the Thames Head spring (now re-sited with a modern marking
stone the other side of the Fosse Way in a little dell). This, known
locally as Athelstan's stone, is at ST 985 991.
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Akerman
wrote: "It has been adapted to the purposes of a horse-block
of "upping stock."" Three steps are cut into it. One
theory was that this stone was a Roman milestone, though its flat
top makes this unlikely unless it was reshaped. Compare it with the
Fretherne Roman milestone (below) with its round top.
For years the mounting stone disappeared under a great heap of brambles
and on three different visits I was unable to find it. But now thanks
to parish councillor Glen Moreman, and a friendly landowner, it is
now visible again. It looks rather more battered than it did in JY
Akerman's sketch. Akerman describes it as just outside the limits
of the Fosse Way, but its present site below road level may mean it
has been moved for road improvements. Compare this stone with the
Mounting stone now in Trellech village (see Wales, Gwent).
Somewhere at the parish boundary should be the Zunt stone, also mentioned
in the charter ("ab illo loco usque zunte stone"). Grundy
places this at SU 011 986 but there is no site of it now. Akerman
claims to have found it fallen by the wayside at ST 969 976, the other
end of the parish boundary. He wrote: "I have reason to believe
it will soon be restored to its former resting place" which was
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FRETHERNE
MILESTONE S0 091 735 [BACK TO TOP]
This
shaped stone is considered a Roman milestone by the Milestone Society.
It is sited just before the church on an old route which may have
led to a crossing of the Severn - though later crossings were probably
at Upper Framilode. This website is mainly devoted to prehistoric
standing stones but I have put this in for comparison with the Kemble
hoar stone and the Crow Hill stone in Herefordshire.
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HETTY
PEGLER'S TUMP, ULEY. SO 789 001
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Named
after the seventeenth century landowner's wife, this is a long barrow,
which has been rebuilt though not very expertly. It is just a little
way away from Nympsfield long barrow which wasn't reconstructed
but instead left open. The tomb was discovered in 1820 when the
beech trees were cut down and excavated in the following year. The
mound was edged by drystone walling and is dated before 3000 BC.
There were 15 skeletons and the jaws of several wild boars in the
chambers, in the gallery and just outside the entrance, according
to Helen O Neill writing in 1961, but G. B. Witt in his Archeological
Handbook of the County of Gloucester in 1883 reports that there
were nearly 30 skeletons. A Romano-British skeleton had been buried
in the mound in later centuries. Uley Iron Age camp is very close.
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THE
LONG STONE, MINCHINHAMPTON. ST 8836 9991
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TO TOP]
A
single standing stone with a smaller one built into a wall nearby.
Possibly the big one is the blocking stone to a ploughed out long
barrow - rather like the Oxfordshire Lineham barrow stone. There
is no sign of a mound any more. The holes in the oolite stone give
rise to a standard folklore story - that sick babies would be cured
if they were passed through the hole. The other legend is that the
Long Stone runs round the field or goes down to the spring a Minchinhampton
to drink at midnight.
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NYMPSFIELD
BARROW, FROCESTER SO 794 013
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A
Neolithic long barrow just below the edge of the hill, not far from
Hetty Pegler's Tump, with a third one, less accessible, a bit further
on. It was examined in l862. "A chambered tumulus, which had
been discovered a short time before in a partially ploughed field
at Nympsfield, Gloucestershire, was opened in August last under
the superintendence of some members of the Cotteswold Naturalists'
Club. A great number of bones of both sexes were strewn around indicating
that the tumulus was the burying vault of some family or tribe,
and not, as was at first suspected the sepulchre of heroes,"
reported the Gentleman's Magazine in l862, Part 11 p 529. There
were 34 femora, a skull, some jawbones. Unlike Hetty Peggler's Tump
the barrow has been left open, rather than rebuilt but the nearby
notice shows the entrance area with typical long barrow "horns"
either side of the entrance and the huge size of the mound as a
whole compared to the small burial area. The back part of the tomb
is now missing. Not far in woodland on the edge of the escarpment
is the Soldier's Grave, a simpler Neolithic burial tomb.
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