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Earthwork but what exactly?

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It's described as an earthwork and possible military encampment on the Sites and Monuments Record of Northern Ireland. It's not on the Atlas of Hillforts of the UK and Ireland. Most disappointingly it's not mentioned on the Megalithic Portal. But this tree-topped mound outside Portglenone has caught my eye on my infrequent visits to visit family in the area. It's officially called Knockanhead but locals call it Clements Hill. It was marked as 102ft on the OSNI Historical First Edition map (1829-35) but only 100ft on subsequent editions (and is listed at 27mo n PRONI's map viewer). The SMR recounts the OS Memoir description of a "few traces of entrenchments on the south western side... a site chosen as fit by some general."  At least one other person thought it was an ancient battleground, probably drawing on the above. In a September 1927 issue of the Weekly Telegraph , someone writing about antiquities found in the Bann area writes: "At the western ...

A shrine for David and his mother

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The early Christian figure known today as St David was canonised and declared patron saint of Wales in the 12th century more than 500 years after his death (supposedly on 1 March 589). Today's St David's Cathedral in Pembrokeshire stands on the site of a monastic community founded by David in the 6th century. He was an important figure in the region well before canonisation, certainly if the story of a visit to the site by William the Conqueror is true. His canonisation probably helped cement Norman influence in the region. The pope who canonised him, Callixtus, declared St David's Cathedral in Pembrokeshire as a place of pilgrimage so important that two pilgrimages here were equivalent to one in Rome.  And it effectively remains a place of pilgrimage today, albeit for tourists as well as worshippers. The Shrine of St David was constructed in the 12th century but damaged during the Reformation. The version seen today is a 21st century restoration, featuring icons by artist ...

O Little Town of Wittenham

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Or, The brief existence and mysterious demise of Littletown Site of Littletown (Destroyed A.D. 1838). Image: CC-BY NLS Itā€™s clearly marked on OS maps from the 19th and 20th century: Littletown, Destroyed A.D 1838. It sounds dramatic, right? An official record of a noteworthy event. At the very least, something that would warrant a mention in a local newspaper. Well, apparently not. Indeed, evidence of Littletownā€™s actual existence is scant, never mind its apparently sudden demise.  Location, location, location  The site where Littletown (sometimes Little Town) once stood is in present-day Oxfordshire, though in an area that was part of Berkshire until 1974. Its location is close to the river Thames, on the northern edge of Little Wittenham parish on its boundary with Long Wittenham parish. The nearby pair of wooded hills known as Wittenham Clumps or Sinodun Hills, one of which was the site of an Iron Age hillfort, are a familiar landmark. The wider area has yielded Bronze Age,...

Meeting the Tandragee Idol

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My first encounter with the Tandragee stone idol was with a replica in the Ulster Museum in Belfast. Replica in Ulster Museum (author's photo, all rights reserved) This curious little figure probably caught my eye because of its name, Tandragee being the village best known as the Northern Irish home of Tayto potato crisps. Peering at the figure a little more closely it seemed to be clutching its left arm (so I thought) with what looked like a smile, sitting beside another stone figure of a bear-like animal. I was astonished to discover that the original Tandragee idol wasnā€™t in another museum but had a much more unlikely home. Beneath a plaque commemorating a late 19th century archbishop of Ireland, worshippers and visitors to St Patrickā€™s Church of Ireland Cathedral in Armagh can see the Tandragee idol in all its glory sitting on a low stone plinth in a side aisle. The cathedral houses other pre-Christian idols in its crypt (judging by photos on Flickr, these have also been on dis...

Iffley, a village apart

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Though technically within the boundaries of Oxford city, Iffley retains a distinct village charm and historical significance of its own, most notably through its remarkably well-preserved Norman church dedicated to St Mary the Virgin. Perched on the east bank of the River Thames (or, Isis in this stretch), Iffley sits safely above the river, approximately two miles downstream of Oxford. The origins of Iffley can be traced back to the chronicles of Abingdon Abbey in the 940s, where it was referred to as Gifteleia. In the Domesday Book in 1086, it was called Givetelei , with "ley" likely deriving from the Saxon term for cleared ground. The name transitioned through Iftele in the 13th century and to Iffley in the 16th century. Evidence of even older settlements is abundant: a sixth-century Saxon brooch found in Iffley is now housed in the British Museum, while nearby Roman pottery sites and Neolithic artifacts hint at a site with a long history. A timeless masterpiece  Dating ...

Under the Crumlin Road

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The Crumlin Road Gaol in north Belfast, built to designs by celebrated architect Sir Charles Lanyon, received its first prisoners (106 in number, marched in procession in chains) in 1846, succeeding Carrickfergus as the new Antrim County Gaol. Directly opposite, also from Lanyon designs, the grander Crumlin Road Courthouse was built at the same time. The new prison initially housed women and children as well as male prisoners. It was divided between four wings (Aā€“D), each three stories high, and each holding different categories of prisoner (remand, sentenced, lifer, long-term prisoner).   These two buildings of course transformed the justice system in Belfast but also the Crumlin Road itself, formerly an area of gentlemen's residences and now an important thoroughfare for a rapidly growing city.  Crumlin Road gaol remained in use until 1996 when the last prisoners were moved out of a now crumbling building. In the intervening years, more than 25,000 prisoners, inclu...

Lost medieval settlements and the abandoned church of Bix Brand

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The idea of a lost medieval village sounds mysterious and thrilling, conjuring images of streets and houses lost to modern maps, abandoned for reasons unknown and buried under layers of subsequent history. In reality these deserted villages were most likely very small settlements populated by a few families linked to a manor house and perhaps a church. There are literally thousands in England alone and the factors driving their abandonment were probably more mundane than catastrophic.  One such abandoned settlement is Bix Brand nestled in a valley in the Chiltern Hills a few miles from Henley. What remains today is the ruins of a Norman era church dedicated to St James but the area is known to have been populated in Roman times - a Roman farmhouse and artefacts have been discovered in the vicinity. Also nearby lies part of the prehistoric earthworks known as Grim's Ditch.  By the time of the Domesday Book, there were two settlements in the area known as Bixa Brand, which had t...