Ancient England A-Z Gazetteer
From stone circles to burial mounds, hill forts to causewayed camp, this gazetteer lists the best of Ancient Britain.
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Ancient Britain


Prehistoric England A-Z (C-M)

A-B - C-M (this page) - N-Z
See also: Ancient Scotland | Wales

 Carn Brea
  

A Neolithic hilltop settlement dating from about 3700BC. The site was used for thousands of years; as excavations turned up Neolithic remains, Bronze Age axes, golden Celtic coins, Roman coins, and later artifacts.
Carn Brea, Near Redruth, Cornwall, England,

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: off B3297
Location map
OS SW687 407

Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Castlerigg
We had the pleasure of visiting here, and our information is based on our personal experiences We took some photos of this location that we'd like to share with you  

Castlerigg Stone circle in a magnificent meadow setting. Not as large, or as well known as Stonehenge, but sit here as the sun goes down and try not to feel awed. Castlerigg was one of the first stone circles built in Britain, dating from about 3000 BC. The circle actually isn't (isn't a circle, that is), with one side flattened and a large gap between two huge stones on the north side, which suggests an entrance of some sort. There is a small rectangle of stones within the circle, an unusual feature in stone circles. There is also a small mound inside the circle, which suggests a burial place.
Keswick, Cumbria, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: off A66, just east of Keswick
Website: Castlerigg
English Heritage
Details of Castlerigg - Photos of Castlerigg
OS NY291 236

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Cerne Abbas Giant
  

Cerne Abbas Giant A 200 foot high figure of a man bearing a club, incised into the chalk of the hillside. The giant has been variously identified as Roman, Celtic, and Iron Age. His obvious, um, physical endowments have made him the source of fertility practices over the centuries; it is said that if an infertile woman spends the night within the figure, she will then be able to bear a child.
Cerne Abbas, Near Dorchester, Dorset, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: viewpoint on A352
Website: Cerne Abbas Giant
Details of Cerne Abbas Giant
OS ST666 017

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Chysauster Ancient Village
  

Chysauster Ancient Village Chysauster was an Iron Age village inhabited from about 100 BC to sometime in the 3rd century AD. It was probably built by members of the Dumnonii tribe of Cornish Britons. The village is composed of eight courtyard houses, laid out in two rows of four. Outside the main grouping of houses is another stone house, and there are the remains of several outlying buildings in the surrounding fields.
Gulval, Cornwall, England, TR20 8XA

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: 2½ m NW Gulval, off B3311
Website: Chysauster Ancient Village
Phone: 07831 757 934
English Heritage
Location map
Details of Chysauster Ancient Village
OS SW473 350

Photo Credit: David Ross
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Dyrham Camp Hillfort
We had the pleasure of visiting here, and our information is based on our personal experiences  

Dyrham Camp Hillfort Otherwise known as Hinton Hillfort this Iron Age fortification is the traditional site of the Battle of Dyrham in 577AD. In this battle, according to the Anglo Saxon Chronicle, the Saxons led by "Cuthwine and Ceawlin fought against the Britons and slew three kings, Coinmail, Condidan and Farimail at the place which is called Dyrham; and they captured three cities, Gloucester, Cirencester and Bath". Though the site of the battle is not known, what is very clear is the spectacular location of the hillfort, with wonderful views towards Wales. The best place to view the hillfort is from the National Trust property of Dyrham Park. Beside the hillfort are remnants of medieval strip lychets, also best seen from Dyrham Park.
Hinton, Cotswolds, Gloucestershire, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: Just off the A46
OS ST738767

Photo Credit: David Ross
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Grimes Graves
  

Grimes Graves is one of the most fascinating Neolithic sites in Britain. Despite its name, it is not a grave, or burial place, but a flint mine worked between about 2200 and 2500 BC. Located in open heath country near Thetford Forest, Grimes Graves consists of over 350 hollows in the ground marking the location of the former mine shafts. Some of the shafts are sunk as deep as 30 feet below the surface - a remarkable accomplishment when you consider that the Neolithic miners used antlers for picks and animal shoulder-blades for shovels. On one of the antler picks found at Grimes Graves archaeologists found a miner's fingerprint - still intact after 4000 years! The mines here produced weapons and tools distributed as far away as Scotland.
Thetford, Norfolk, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: 7 miles NW of Thetford, off A134
Website: Grimes Graves
Phone: 01842 810 656
English Heritage
OS TL804 901

Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Grimspound
  

An impressive Bronze Age settlement of on Dartmoor. Grimspound featured in the Sherlock Holmes story, 'The Hound of the Baskervilles'.
Challacombe, Moretonhampstead, Dartmoor, Devon, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: 6 miles SW of Moretonhampstead off the B3212
Website: Grimspound
English Heritage
Details of Grimspound
OS SX701 809

Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Hob Hurst's House
  

Hob Hurst's House is a prehistoric burial chamber, unusual in that it is recangular in shape, roughly 8 x 7.5 m and 1 m high.
Baslow, Derbyshire, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: Accessible via an unclassified road from the B5057, 5 miles Baslow, 9 miles W of Chesterfield
Website: Hob Hurst's House
Phone: 01629 816 200
English Heritage
Details of Hob Hurst's House
OS SK287 692

Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 King Arthur's Round Table
  

King Arthur's Round Table A much altered henge complex, only a few hundred yards from the larger and more intact Mayburgh Henge.
Penrith, Cumbria, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: 1 mile s of Penrith on the west side of the A66
English Heritage
Details of King Arthur's Round Table
OS NY523283

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Lanyon Quoit
  

Lanyon Quoit The quoit consists of one large stone supported upon three standing stones. It is likely the remains of a long barrow, or chambered tomb.
Madron, Cornwall, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: Off a minor road 2 miles NW of Madron
Details of Lanyon Quoit
OS SW430 337

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Long Meg and Her Daughters
  

Long Meg and Her Daughters Bronze Age stone circle in a lovely setting.
Little Salkeld, Near Penrith, Cumbria, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: just NE of Little Salkeld, 2 miles N of Langwathby, off the A686
Details of Long Meg and Her Daughters
OS NY571371

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Maiden Castle
  

Maiden Castle The largest and most famous pre-Roman fortress in Britain. The site is nearly 100 acres in size, with banks as high as 80 feet enclosing a hill-top site of some 45 acres. It was inhabited as early as the Bronze Age, but most of the visible ramparts were erected in the 1st century BC. In 43 AD the Romans besieged the "castle". The defenders huge store of some 40,000 sling stones proved useless against the Roman's leather shields, and the site fell to the invaders. A mass grave of defenders who died in the assault was found in 1937 near the eastern entrance. A site worth seeing.
Dorchester, Dorset, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: 1 mile SW of Dorchester, off A354
Website: Maiden Castle
English Heritage
Details of Maiden Castle
OS SY670 885

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Mayburgh Henge
  

Mayburgh Henge A large Neolithic Henge with a solitary standing stone in the middle.
Penrith, Lake District, Cumbria, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: 1 mile s of Penrith off the A66, then signposted from B5320
English Heritage
Details of Mayburgh Henge
OS NY519285

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Men an Tol
We had the pleasure of visiting here, and our information is based on our personal experiences We took some photos of this location that we'd like to share with you  

Men an Tol An intriguing monument consisting of two upright stones standing on either side of a round stone with a hole through the middle.
Madron, Cornwall, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: Off the minor road between Madron and Morvah
Details of Men an Tol
OS SW426 349

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 Merry Maidens
  

Merry Maidens A circle of 19 small stones in a field near Lamorna, on the Lands End to Newlyn road. This is probably the best preserved of all the stone circles in Cornwall, and it is, unusually, believed to be complete and unaltered.
Lamorna, Cornwall, England

Attraction Type: Prehistoric
Location: On the B3315, 3/4 mile west of Lamorna
Details of Merry Maidens
OS SW433 245

Photo Credit: David Ross and Britain Express
Accommodation: nearest hotels - nearest Self catering


 

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Text © David Ross and Britain Express

  


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