HOME
Ancient History

 

  

As a non-commercial Community web site we rely totally on people in the community to send us information and photos that will add to other people's knowledge of Exmoor and its surrounding area. Many thanks to the thousands of people who have contributed information so far to Everything Exmoor. Do you know the history of a particular place or have a story to tell about a local character? If so please send it along.

Add a FREE business listing - Send us photos and text for the site - Suggest new pages
Add events to the Exmoor Calendar - Add an Exmoor related Online Shop


Business Section

Menu


Home
Submit Listing
Compare Memberships
Login Now
Advanced Search
Contact Us
Sitemap
Improve your listing
Online Exmoor Shops

Categories


   Accountants
   Agriculture
   Animals
   Artists
   Art and Antiques
   Arts and Crafts
   Beauty and Hair
   Building and Construction
   Business Services
   Care Providers
   Charities and Voluntary Groups
   Clothing
   Clothing & Accessories
   Clubs and Societies
   Computing and internet
   Dancing
   Education
   Employment
   Entertainment
   Environmental
   Family
   Farming
   Festivals and Events
   Financial and Legal
   Food and Drink
   Furniture
   Gardening
   Health and Beauty
   Home Services
   Horse Riding
   Information Websites
   Insurance and Security
   Investigators
   Local and Community
   Manufacturing and Engineering
   Marine
   Media and Communication
   Personal Development
   Personal Services
   Photography
   Portal websites
   Property and Accommodation
   Public and Social Services
   Shopping
   Solar and Wind Energy
   Sport and Leisure
   Towns and Villages
   Trades
   Transport and Vehicles
   Travel & Tourism
   Village websites
   Weddings
   Wood Fuel Heating
  

Login Now


Username:
Password:


Password Reminder

Georgian Arabians

Above is a randomly chosen banner to support an Exmoor Business

Recent Listings


Keyboardist Pete Chandler
, Barnstaple, Devon

Composer Pete Chandler sets North Devon to music
10-11-2008

Kens Image & Phtography
, Barnstaple, Devon

photo's & images of my work in photograph
06-11-2008

Ian Stuart Lyon Signs
, Withypool, Somerset

Oak Signs are perfect for signage
05-11-2008

Venford Therapies
, Venford, Devon

Aromatherapy massage with essential oils
05-11-2008

Peter Kirk live
, Bideford, Devon

Live music for any occasion guitarist/vocalist
03-11-2008

Robbers Bridge
Robbers Bridge
Picture courtesy of www.lyndalephotographic.co.uk



Dog Partnership

Above is a randomly chosen banner to support an Exmoor Business

Search for:    

Click here for an ADVANCED BUSINESS DIRECTORY SEARCH

Ancient History of Exmoor

Add your information to this page

Exmoor, as we know it to-day, populated by man came about after the retreat of the last of the great Ice Ages that covered the Earth.

There are many barrows, stone circles and other antiquities on Exmoor that are worth a visit.

Exmoor has been populated since the Iron Age and has 162 Scheduled Monuments and 1011 Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Listed Buildings).

Exmoor has many ancient features for you to explore. There are Prehistoric Barrows, Standing Stones and Stone Circles, an Ancient 'Clapper' Bridge at Tarr Steps, Medieval Villages, Castles, Mines and Packhorse Bridges.

Inhabitation of Exmoor dates back to Mesolithic times when people living on the moor used to exploit the area for their own purposes. For instance, the moorland was ideal for grazing animals, hunting and fishing. Remnants from this time can still be found on Exmoor in the form of standing stones, flint arrowheads and derelict buildings.

By walking across Exmoor's landscape you can see how people used to live there in the past by exploring the numerous undisturbed archaelogical sites and monuments.

Caractus stone - Winsford Hill

Caractus stone, Winsford Hill

During the Neolithic and Bronze Age period more settled farmers began to cut down trees for timber used in buildings and fencing, for artefacts and for fuel. Small fields were enclosed and cultivated and animals put to graze on the cleared ground. The climate was milder and people made greater use of the moor for grazing, setting up stones to mark significant sites and burying their dead under the great heaps of stone and earth that we know as barrows. Whether the Lark Barrow was once such a burial mound or simply a heap of stones to mark the later forest boundary is not certain. It has long gone.

Later the Saxons settled on lower ground where there was protection and water while the wild centre of the moor, outside the jurisdiction of the villages, was held by the crown for hunting and became known as the Royal Forest of Exmoor. The Lark Barrow lay on the boundary that separated the forest from the commons used by villagers for grazing, cutting peat and gathering fuel.
There was some hunting in the forest during the medieval period but more important to the economy of the area was its extensive use for summer grazing of sheep and cattle which were put on the moor from spring until autumn. In the winter only the indigenous Exmoor ponies were able to survive the harshness of the weather on the high moorland.

Little changed in the way the moor was worked until the early 19th century when, during the Napoleonic Wars, there was a shortage of food. It was decided to sell the ancient forest for agricultural reclamation and in 1818, John Knight, an iron master from Wolverley in Worcestershire with an interest in farming change, bought much of the Forest for £50,000.

One of the first things he did was enclose his new estate and a section of the wall built for this purpose was later to form part of the boundary of Larkbarrow Farm. He soon set about reclaiming land, starting on the south-facing slopes of the River Barle, spading, ploughing and liming ground that had never been cultivated before. His attempts to run the whole estate from a centre at Simonsbath were not really successful and when his son Frederic took over in 1841 he started to build new farms for leasing to tenants.

The first evidence of human settlement is almost entirely confined to the areas around Exmoor, rather than on the moor itself. The earliest signs of occupation is the Earth Ring at Parracombe which is believed to be a Neolithic Henge dated 5000-4000BCE. The ready availability of Copper and Tin on Exmoor attracted a large population to the area in the Bronze Age. It is likely that the Moor was not settled until around 1800-1500 BC. From this period are Stone Circles at Porlock Hill, Almsworthy Common and Withypool Hill.

There are many Barrows on Exmoor mostly from the Bronze Age and containing burial chambers dating back some 3,500 years. There is also evidence of the ruins of Bronze Age houses.

The excavating activities of Grave robbers looking for treasure have caused many of these Barrows to fall in. A local Lord was licensed by Edward II to excavate six Barrows thought to be the Chapman Barrows in the hunt for plunder.

Standing Stones and Barrows are often to be found at the top of hills at the sources of springs. It is thought that they were the sites of religious ceremonies to worship deities and spirits of water and sun.

Longstone at Challacombe marks is at the source of the River Bray and is situated on an Ancient Ridgeway passing through Chapman Barrows, the Longstone and Longstone Barrow to Woodbarrow.

There is little evidence of occupation during the Roman period (43 - 410 AD), two fortlets at Old Barrow (SS 788 494) and the Beacon (SS 664 493) being the only remains now visible.

 

 

The whole of Exmoor, even the wildest parts, has long been influenced by the activities of men and women. The Bronze Age inhabitants (between 2000 -750 BC) were fairly numerous, and left many monuments, particularly barrows such as Wood Barrow near Challacombe. Stone does not outcrop much on Exmoor, so the stone monuments, such as menhirs, rows and circles, are fewer and less impressive than those found on Dartmoor or the Cornish moors.

 

PREHISTORIC ANTIQUITIES - THE MAIN PREHISTORIC PERIODS

Palaeolithic Period
The Old or Early Stone Age dates from the remote past up to about 8000 B.C. During this period man developed the craft of chipping flint implements. From crude work gradual improvement and skill produced well-made axe-heads, scrapers and other tools and weapons.

Neolithic Period
The New or Later Stone Age gradually developed from the Palaeolithic and extended to about 1800 B.C. Still further advance was made in the art of flint-chipping and to this period belong many fine arrow-heads. knives and other implements. Many evidences of Neolithic man remain, such as cromlechs, dolmens, standing stones and long barrows.

Bronze Age
The craft of smelting bronze was introduced into Britain about 1800 B.C. and gave the name to the period of the following 1,500 years. Many of the existing barrows, hut-circles and earthworks are of the Bronze Age.

Iron Age
The use of bronze gradually gave way to the harder metal—iron—and this period extends into the days of recorded history. Fortified earthworks and settlements are among the principal remains of the Iron Age.


GLOSSARY OF PREHISTORIC ANTIQUITIES

Barrow. An artificial mound of earth, or earth and stones, raised over burials of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages.

Beehive Hut. An early dwelling place, so built that the stones of the wall overlap and meet in the roof centre.

Cairn. A mound of stones raised, often over a burial place. Capstone. The flat stone surmounting a dolmen.

Cinerary Urn. Urn containing cremated human remains. Sometimes the urn is inverted over the remains.

Cromlech. A ring or circle of standing stones.

Dolmen. A burial chamber consisting of three or four upright stones covered by another, often of great size, laid fiat across the top and often originally covered by a mound of earth.

Earthworks. The citadels, or forts, of prehistoric days, usually on hilltops or other elevated ground.

Fogue. A Cornish term for an underground chamber or gallery.

Fosse. The ditch surrounding an earthwork.

Holed Stone. A perforated dolmen.

Hut Circle. Circular hollow in the ground, the site of an early habitation. Kist Vaen. A Cornish term for a stone burial chamber, usually smaller than a dolmen.

Long Barrow. A burial mound of the Neolithic period, generally orientated.

Lynchet. A terrace on a hillside, usually in series, formed for the purpose of cultivation.

Menhir. A tall, upright, unhewn stone, sometimes isolated or associated with smaller stones. May be gravestones or ol religious significance.

Neolithic. Of the New or Later Stone Age.

Palaeolithic. Of the Old or Early Stone Age.

Quoit. A Cornish term for a stone burial chamber, similar to a dolmen.

Round Barrow. A burial chamber of the Bronze Age.

Sarsen Stones. Blocks of sandstone found on the Wiltshire Downs and south-east England. Sometimes called Grey Wethers.

Stone Circle. A ring of standing stones, usually not enclosing a burial place.

Trilithon. Two upright stones connected across the top by a flat lintet stone.

Tumulus. An artificial mound of earth, not necessarily sepulchral. Vallum. The bank of an earthwork.

A Dolman

A Dolman

SITES TO VISIT

All of these historic sites are either in public ownership or are accessible on public rights of way or via permissive paths and access land. However, you are advised to use an Ordnance Survey Map (Outdoor Leisure 9 - Exmoor) and 'The Field Archaeology of Exmoor' (by H Riley and R Wilson-North, published by English Heritage, 2001). Both are available from National Park Centres and local outlets.

Please be aware that many archaeological sites on Exmoor are on private land. When in doubt you should always seek permission.

  • Chetsford Water - Bronze Age Field System and Hut circles SS 8513 4247
  • Almsworthy Common - Neolithic/Bronze Age stone setting SS 8430 4171
  • Chapman Barrows - Bronze Age burial mounds SS 695 435
  • Timberscombe - Iron Age enclosure SS 9572 4139
  • Bat's Castle - Iron Age hillfort SS 9881 4213
  • Wind Hill - Iron Age promontory fort SS 7405 4936
  • Cow Castle - Iron Age hillfort SS 7945 3735
  • Old Burrow - Roman Fortlet SS 7880 4934 Martinhoe - Roman Fortlet SS 6630 4933
  • Caratacus Stone - inscribed memorial stone SS 8898 3355
  • Cavudus Stone - inscribed memorial stone SS 7004 4825
  • Culbone Stone - inscribed stone SS 8320 4735
  • St Culbone Church - early Christian dedication SS 842 483
  • Dunster - castle built on Norman motte and bailey castle SS 9911 4344
  • Dunster - medieval market town SS 992 438
  • Dulverton - medieval market town SS 914 279
  • Badgworthy - deserted medieval settlement SS 7935 4445
  • Burcombe - iron mining remains SS 750 383
  • Burrow Farm - engine house ST 009 345
  • North Hill - WWII tank training grounds SS 954 475

 

See also:

Contributed by:Mike Townsend

Add your information to this Everything Exmoor page now

Community Section

Number of people currently online at Everything Exmoor - 33
Maximum number of people simultaneously viewing Everything Exmoor recently - 45

Full list of Everything Exmoor Pages SEE FULL
LIST OF EXMOOR
COMMUNITY PAGES...
Currently over 1200 pages of information - you can add more..
QUICK CHOOSE A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Exmoor Calendar of Events

Calendar
Events on Exmoor

Blaze - lost Collie dog
Blaze - lost Collie dog




HELP ME to find information on this web site
Contact us
Add to Favourites
Refer a friend
Project Background
Public Notices

Local Weather
Newsletter
Read the National Park Exmoor Visitor Newspaper


Exmoor Photography
Above is a randomly chosen banner to support an Exmoor Business

Dunster Yarn Market , Exmoor National Park
Dunster Yarn Market , Exmoor
National Park

Buzzard , Exmoor National Park
Buzzard , Exmoor National Park


Featured Listings


The Tufters
, Winsford, Somerset

Self Catering accommodation


Peter Kirk live
, Bideford, Devon

Live music for any occasion guitarist/vocalist


Ben Horrobin Artist & Blacksmith
, Roadwater, Somerset




Tree Care Training Services
, Stogursey, Somerset




Ponies with Presence
, Exford, Somerset

Quality ponies for competition and pleasure



Featured Products




DPL Therapy System - Anti Aging Light Therapy Allergymatters
9 minutes away from young and fresh looking skin…


Indian Head Massage One-Day Practitioner Diploma Course



Cranberry Glass Ware
Our online shop with the full range of cranberry wares





© 2006-2008 Everything Exmoor All Rights Reserved for the site structure.

All text, content, photos, diagrams, logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owners who are a mix of individual contributors from the community, organisations and businesses.





Disclaimer | Privacy | Terms of Use | Business Directory Site Map | Community Pages Site Map

As a condition of using this web site you note that Everything Exmoor and those creating the web site try to ensure that the information supplied and published on Everything Exmoor is accurate. However, we cannot accept any liability for the accuracy of content and no responsibility can be accepted by anyone connected with Everything Exmoor for any consequential loss or damage arising from its use. Visitors who rely on the information on Everything Exmoor do so at their own risk. Prior to using this web site you must read and agree to the following three documents Disclaimer, Privacy and Terms of Use

This site is continually being updated - last major update 07th April 2008

We would very much appreciate it if you you place a link to this web site from your own web pages