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Carn Brea, Redruth

Carn Brea (Cornish: Karnbre)[1] is a civil parish and hilltop site in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The population of Carn Brea including Bosleake and Church Coombe was 8,013 at the 2011 census.[2] The hilltop site is situated approximately one mile (1.6 km) southwest of Redruth.[3] The settlements of Bosleake, Brea, Broad Lane, Carn Arthen, Carn Brea Village, Carnkie, Four Lanes, Grillis, Illogan Highway, Pencoys, Penhallick, Piece, Pool, Tolskithy, Tregajorran, Treskillard, Tuckingmill and West Tolgus are in the parish.[4]

Carn Brea
Carn Brea, seen from Redruth. Carn Brea Castle and Monument are visible at the top of the hill.
Carn Brea
Coordinates: 50°13′19″N 5°14′49″W / 50.222°N 5.247°W / 50.222; -5.247

Neolithic settlement Edit

The Neolithic settlement at Carn Brea was a tor enclosure occupied between around 3700 and 3400 BC. Roger Mercer directed archaeological excavations of the site in 1970.[5] and 1972.[6]

A two-acre (0.81-hectare) inner enclosure was surrounded by one of eleven acres (4.5 hectares). The ramparts consisted of stone walls with an earth bank and ditch. Traces of fourteen platforms on which would have stood Neolithic long houses have been found within its ramparts, along with pottery and flint artefacts.

The settlement had an estimated population of 100 to 150. There is evidence that the occupants cleared the surrounding land for farming by burning away the undergrowth and removing stones although the acid soil obliterated any environmental evidence. Nearby outcrops of rock suitable for making axes would have contributed to the village's economy. Edge grinding stones, blanks and incomplete and finished axes found on the site indicate the inhabitants were accomplished stoneworkers and traded their products. Pottery found on the site appears to have been made from gabbroic clay originating nearly 20 miles (32 km) to the south in the present day parish of St Keverne suggesting a complex economic network in the area.[7]

Over 700 flint arrowheads were found scattered at the site.[8] Despite nineteenth-century destruction (work to level and widen the entrance track), there was a concentration of arrow heads around a probable entrance to the enclosure, Mercer's site E. These arrows may have been used by a large group of archers in an organized assault upon a defended site.[9] Every timber structure on the site had been burnt, and charcoal was the only organic matter that survived the acid soils. The earthworks may have been deliberately damaged by invaders.

Iron Age settlement Edit

 
Westerham gold stater from the hoard found in 1749

In the Iron Age the site was reoccupied and minerals were mined from the hillside. One hut floor was excavated, and sherds of characteristically Iron Age types, including 'cordoned ware', were found.[6] The fortified gateway, Mercer's Site G, was of Iron Age form, and Mercer suggests that although Site G produced no Iron Age artifacts, it is post-Neolithic. The crushed-rock road surface showed little sign of contemporary wear and could never have been subjected to even a modicum of traffic.[6]

A hoard of Gallo-Belgic gold staters originating from northeastern Gaul and Kent were found in the 18th century.[10]

The Ravenna Cosmography, of around AD 700, refers to Purocoronavis (almost certainly a corruption of Durocornovium), 'a fort or walled settlement of the Cornovii' (unidentified, but possibly Tintagel or Carn Brea).

Landmarks Edit

Carn Brea Castle Edit

 
Carn Brea Castle

Carn Brea Castle stands near the top of the hill. It is built on the site of a chapel built in 1379 probably dedicated to St Michael.[11] It was built in the 18th century by the Basset family as a hunting lodge.[12] It is considered to be a folly built on the huge uncut boulders that make up part of its foundations, giving the impression of the building melting into the land.[13] An East India trading ship named after Carn Brea Castle was wrecked off the Isle of Wight in 1829 and involved in excise tax fraud.[14]

In the 1980s the abandoned building was converted into a Middle Eastern cuisine restaurant.[15] The stolen Ford Anglia featured in the Harry Potter films was found at the castle in 2006.[16] 50°13′20.85″N 5°14′41.40″W / 50.2224583°N 5.2448333°W / 50.2224583; -5.2448333 (Carn Brea Castle)

Basset Monument Edit

 
Basset Monument

At the highest point of the hill is a 90-feet high (27m) Celtic cross erected as a monument to Francis Basset, 1st Baron de Dunstanville and Basset (1757–1835). Basset, a mine owner, gained his titles for erecting earthworks to defend Plymouth from combined French and Spanish fleets in 1779, and suppressing a miners' "food riot" in 1785.[17] Along with others, he petitioned the House of Lords against slavery in 1828.[18] The monument was erected by public subscription in 1836. It is inscribed "The County of Cornwall to the memory of Francis Lord de Dunstanville and Basset A.D. 1836."[19][20] 50°13′16″N 5°14′56″W / 50.22111°N 5.24889°W / 50.22111; -5.24889 (Basset Cross)

Cup and Saucer Rock Edit

 
Cup and Saucer Rock

The Cup and Saucer Rock next to the monument is a large flattish rock with several deep basins (see Photograph). The rock has been called "The Sacrificing Rock" (although with doubtful historical accuracy).[21] 50°13′16″N 5°14′54″W / 50.22111°N 5.24833°W / 50.22111; -5.24833 (Sacrificing Rock)

Smugglers' Cave Edit

 
Smugglers' Cave

In a depression between the monument and the castle are the remains of the "Smugglers' Cave". It was blocked with rocks by the council in the 1980s to stop children entering. The tunnel is rumoured to extend from the top of the carn into Redruth town, but it is probably an abandoned mine working. It may have been confused with another tunnel from the castle to St Uny's church which was blocked for safety reasons around 1970 by the castle owners.[22][23] 50°13′19″N 5°14′50″W / 50.22194°N 5.24722°W / 50.22194; -5.24722 (Smugglers' Cave)

Saint Euny's Well Edit

Saint Euny's Well is at the foot of Carn Brea below the castle near St Euny's Church. It has a plaque by Carn Brea Parish Trails reading "St Euny Well. Holy well of St Euny visited by the Celtic Missionary 500AD". Stories about its sacred use may be confused with St Euny's Well at Sancreed (see Carn Euny).

Events Edit

At Easter Redruth Baptist Church erects a lit cross on the outcrop behind the Castle overlooking Redruth. For many years a Christian sunrise service has been held on Easter Sunday.

The Midsummer Eve (St. John's Eve, 23 June) bonfire ceremony originated as a pagan ritual. Prayers are read in Cornish and the bonfire is lit, signalling other fires to be lit at Sennen, Sancreed Beacon, Carn Galver to the Tamar. When only the embers remain, young people leap across them to drive away evil and bring luck.[24]

The Boxing Day meet of the Four Burrow Hunt starts at the top of Carn Brea.[25][26] Due to the changes in fox hunting legislation foxes are no longer hunted.

See also Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Cornish Language Partnership. May 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  2. ^ Office for National Statistics, Key Figures for 2011 Census: Key Statistics, Area: Carn Brea parish
  3. ^ Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 203 Land's End ISBN 978-0-319-23148-7
  4. ^ Cornwall; Explore Britain
  5. ^ Mercer, R.J. (1970). "The Neolithic Settlement on Carn Brea: Preliminary Report". Cornish Archaeology. 9: 54–62. https://cornisharchaeology.org.uk/volume-9-1970/
  6. ^ a b c Mercer, R.J. (1972). "The Excavation of the Neolithic Settlement, Carn Brea". Cornish Archaeology. 11. https://cornisharchaeology.org.uk/volume-11-1972/
  7. ^ St. Keverne Local History Society. "The Prehistoric use of Gabbroic Clay from St Keverne". Archived from the original on 3 February 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2012.
  8. ^ Cornwall Archaeological Society. Carn Brea, Early Neolithic tor enclosure, c 3700 BC http://www.royalarchinst.org/jubilee/cas
  9. ^ Shadowland, Wales 300-1500 BC. Steve Burrow, National Museum of Wales / Oxbow Books, 2011, page 147
  10. ^ As referenced in Mercer, 1970: BORLASE, WILLIAM, Observations on Antiquities ... of the County of Cornwall (Oxford, 1754). ALLEN, D. F., "The origins of coinage in Britain—a reappraisal', in: Frere, S. S., ed.. Problems of the Iron Age in Southern Britain (1960), 97 ff. ALLAN, J., 'The Carn Brea hoard of 1749', Numism. Chron., 6th ser. 8 (1948), 235-6—this 'does not analyse the hoard correctly' (so ALLEN, D. F., art. cit., 287). and for the first 20th-century republication of the hoard, Allen, D. (1944). I.—The Belgic Dynasties of Britain and their Coins. Archaeologia, 90, 1-46. doi:10.1017/S0261340900009747
  11. ^ "About Carn Brea" 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Carn Brea Protection Group. Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  12. ^ "Pictures of Carn Brea" 8 August 2001 at the Wayback Machine, Parish of Saint Illogan. Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  13. ^ "Carn Brea Castle" 29 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Follies and Monuments, FollyTowers.com. Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  14. ^ "Some frauds of a very peculiar and extensive nature have been discovered". The Times. 18 July 1829. p. 4.
  15. ^ "Carn Brea Castle, Redruth – Cornwall" 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Restaurants in Cornwall, EatOutCornwall.com. Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  16. ^ "The Scotsman: Harry Potter's stolen car appears at castle". The Scotsman Publications Ltd. 19 May 2006. Retrieved 30 October 2006.
  17. ^ "The Bassets of Tehidy" 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Cornish History Reference Files, CornishWorld.net. Retrieved 20 August 2007.
  18. ^ "Parliamentary Intelligence, House of Lords". The Times. 3 June 1828.
  19. ^ As shown by the stone inscription on the south of the monument. See inscription text on Basset Cross photograph
  20. ^ "Tuesday's Post". Jackson's Oxford Journal. 17 September 1836. A chaste and elegant monument from the chisel of Westmacott put up in parish of Illogan, Cornwall, to the memory of the late Lord De Dunstanville
  21. ^ Curran, Bob (2005). Celtic Lore & Legend: meet the gods, heroes, kings, fairies, monsters and ghosts of yore. New Page Books. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-56414-786-8.
  22. ^ (Tangye 1981)
  23. ^ (Historic Environment Service 2006, p. 3)
  24. ^ Noall, Cyril (1963). The Cornish Midsummer Eve bonfire celebrations. Federation of Old Cornwall Societies. Publications. Federation of Old Cornwall Societies. OCLC 30233069.
  25. ^ . Newsquest Media Group. 3 January 2003. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 30 October 2006.
  26. ^ "Smallholder: Ban? What Ban?". Newsquest Media Group. 28 December 2005. Retrieved 30 October 2006.

References Edit

  • Acton, Bob (2001). Exploring Cornwall's tramway trails, Volume 1 (2 ed.). Landfall. ISBN 978-1-873443-41-5.
  • Historic Environment Service (2006). (PDF). Cornwall County Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 19 August 2007.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
  • Mercer, R.J. (1981). . Cornish Archaeology. 20. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007. Retrieved 30 October 2006.
  • Tangye, Michael (1981). Carn Brea: brief history and guide. Dyllansow Truran. ISBN 978-0-907566-12-0.
  • Noall, Cyril (2003). The Cornish Midsummer Eve Bonfire Celebrations. Federation of Old Cornwall Societies. ISBN 978-0-902660-31-1.

External links Edit

  • Parish Council website
  • Cornish Archaeological Society
  • records of Romano-British Settlement of Carn Brea

carn, brea, redruth, carn, brea, cornish, karnbre, civil, parish, hilltop, site, cornwall, england, united, kingdom, population, carn, brea, including, bosleake, church, coombe, 2011, census, hilltop, site, situated, approximately, mile, southwest, redruth, se. Carn Brea Cornish Karnbre 1 is a civil parish and hilltop site in Cornwall England United Kingdom The population of Carn Brea including Bosleake and Church Coombe was 8 013 at the 2011 census 2 The hilltop site is situated approximately one mile 1 6 km southwest of Redruth 3 The settlements of Bosleake Brea Broad Lane Carn Arthen Carn Brea Village Carnkie Four Lanes Grillis Illogan Highway Pencoys Penhallick Piece Pool Tolskithy Tregajorran Treskillard Tuckingmill and West Tolgus are in the parish 4 Carn BreaCarn Brea seen from Redruth Carn Brea Castle and Monument are visible at the top of the hill Carn BreaCoordinates 50 13 19 N 5 14 49 W 50 222 N 5 247 W 50 222 5 247 Contents 1 Neolithic settlement 2 Iron Age settlement 3 Landmarks 3 1 Carn Brea Castle 3 2 Basset Monument 3 3 Cup and Saucer Rock 3 4 Smugglers Cave 3 5 Saint Euny s Well 4 Events 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 External linksNeolithic settlement EditThe Neolithic settlement at Carn Brea was a tor enclosure occupied between around 3700 and 3400 BC Roger Mercer directed archaeological excavations of the site in 1970 5 and 1972 6 A two acre 0 81 hectare inner enclosure was surrounded by one of eleven acres 4 5 hectares The ramparts consisted of stone walls with an earth bank and ditch Traces of fourteen platforms on which would have stood Neolithic long houses have been found within its ramparts along with pottery and flint artefacts The settlement had an estimated population of 100 to 150 There is evidence that the occupants cleared the surrounding land for farming by burning away the undergrowth and removing stones although the acid soil obliterated any environmental evidence Nearby outcrops of rock suitable for making axes would have contributed to the village s economy Edge grinding stones blanks and incomplete and finished axes found on the site indicate the inhabitants were accomplished stoneworkers and traded their products Pottery found on the site appears to have been made from gabbroic clay originating nearly 20 miles 32 km to the south in the present day parish of St Keverne suggesting a complex economic network in the area 7 Over 700 flint arrowheads were found scattered at the site 8 Despite nineteenth century destruction work to level and widen the entrance track there was a concentration of arrow heads around a probable entrance to the enclosure Mercer s site E These arrows may have been used by a large group of archers in an organized assault upon a defended site 9 Every timber structure on the site had been burnt and charcoal was the only organic matter that survived the acid soils The earthworks may have been deliberately damaged by invaders Iron Age settlement Edit nbsp Westerham gold stater from the hoard found in 1749In the Iron Age the site was reoccupied and minerals were mined from the hillside One hut floor was excavated and sherds of characteristically Iron Age types including cordoned ware were found 6 The fortified gateway Mercer s Site G was of Iron Age form and Mercer suggests that although Site G produced no Iron Age artifacts it is post Neolithic The crushed rock road surface showed little sign of contemporary wear and could never have been subjected to even a modicum of traffic 6 A hoard of Gallo Belgic gold staters originating from northeastern Gaul and Kent were found in the 18th century 10 The Ravenna Cosmography of around AD 700 refers to Purocoronavis almost certainly a corruption of Durocornovium a fort or walled settlement of the Cornovii unidentified but possibly Tintagel or Carn Brea Landmarks EditCarn Brea Castle Edit nbsp Carn Brea CastleCarn Brea Castle stands near the top of the hill It is built on the site of a chapel built in 1379 probably dedicated to St Michael 11 It was built in the 18th century by the Basset family as a hunting lodge 12 It is considered to be a folly built on the huge uncut boulders that make up part of its foundations giving the impression of the building melting into the land 13 An East India trading ship named after Carn Brea Castle was wrecked off the Isle of Wight in 1829 and involved in excise tax fraud 14 In the 1980s the abandoned building was converted into a Middle Eastern cuisine restaurant 15 The stolen Ford Anglia featured in the Harry Potter films was found at the castle in 2006 16 50 13 20 85 N 5 14 41 40 W 50 2224583 N 5 2448333 W 50 2224583 5 2448333 Carn Brea Castle Basset Monument Edit nbsp Basset MonumentAt the highest point of the hill is a 90 feet high 27m Celtic cross erected as a monument to Francis Basset 1st Baron de Dunstanville and Basset 1757 1835 Basset a mine owner gained his titles for erecting earthworks to defend Plymouth from combined French and Spanish fleets in 1779 and suppressing a miners food riot in 1785 17 Along with others he petitioned the House of Lords against slavery in 1828 18 The monument was erected by public subscription in 1836 It is inscribed The County of Cornwall to the memory of Francis Lord de Dunstanville and Basset A D 1836 19 20 50 13 16 N 5 14 56 W 50 22111 N 5 24889 W 50 22111 5 24889 Basset Cross Cup and Saucer Rock Edit nbsp Cup and Saucer RockThe Cup and Saucer Rock next to the monument is a large flattish rock with several deep basins see Photograph The rock has been called The Sacrificing Rock although with doubtful historical accuracy 21 50 13 16 N 5 14 54 W 50 22111 N 5 24833 W 50 22111 5 24833 Sacrificing Rock Smugglers Cave Edit nbsp Smugglers CaveIn a depression between the monument and the castle are the remains of the Smugglers Cave It was blocked with rocks by the council in the 1980s to stop children entering The tunnel is rumoured to extend from the top of the carn into Redruth town but it is probably an abandoned mine working It may have been confused with another tunnel from the castle to St Uny s church which was blocked for safety reasons around 1970 by the castle owners 22 23 50 13 19 N 5 14 50 W 50 22194 N 5 24722 W 50 22194 5 24722 Smugglers Cave Saint Euny s Well Edit Saint Euny s Well is at the foot of Carn Brea below the castle near St Euny s Church It has a plaque by Carn Brea Parish Trails reading St Euny Well Holy well of St Euny visited by the Celtic Missionary 500AD Stories about its sacred use may be confused with St Euny s Well at Sancreed see Carn Euny Events EditAt Easter Redruth Baptist Church erects a lit cross on the outcrop behind the Castle overlooking Redruth For many years a Christian sunrise service has been held on Easter Sunday The Midsummer Eve St John s Eve 23 June bonfire ceremony originated as a pagan ritual Prayers are read in Cornish and the bonfire is lit signalling other fires to be lit at Sennen Sancreed Beacon Carn Galver to the Tamar When only the embers remain young people leap across them to drive away evil and bring luck 24 The Boxing Day meet of the Four Burrow Hunt starts at the top of Carn Brea 25 26 Due to the changes in fox hunting legislation foxes are no longer hunted See also Edit nbsp Cornwall portalDumnonii a Celtic tribe who inhabited part of the South West peninsula of Britain during the Iron Age and the early Roman period Great Flat Lode Carn Brea railway station the site of the West Cornwall Railway s locomotive workshops Footnotes Edit List of Place names agreed by the MAGA Signage Panel PDF Cornish Language Partnership May 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 29 July 2014 Retrieved 11 January 2015 Office for National Statistics Key Figures for 2011 Census Key Statistics Area Carn Brea parish Ordnance Survey Landranger map sheet 203 Land s End ISBN 978 0 319 23148 7 Cornwall Explore Britain Mercer R J 1970 The Neolithic Settlement on Carn Brea Preliminary Report Cornish Archaeology 9 54 62 https cornisharchaeology org uk volume 9 1970 a b c Mercer R J 1972 The Excavation of the Neolithic Settlement Carn Brea Cornish Archaeology 11 https cornisharchaeology org uk volume 11 1972 St Keverne Local History Society The Prehistoric use of Gabbroic Clay from St Keverne Archived from the original on 3 February 2013 Retrieved 11 March 2012 Cornwall Archaeological Society Carn Brea Early Neolithic tor enclosure c 3700 BC http www royalarchinst org jubilee cas Shadowland Wales 300 1500 BC Steve Burrow National Museum of Wales Oxbow Books 2011 page 147 As referenced in Mercer 1970 BORLASE WILLIAM Observations on Antiquities of the County of Cornwall Oxford 1754 ALLEN D F The origins of coinage in Britain a reappraisal in Frere S S ed Problems of the Iron Age in Southern Britain 1960 97 ff ALLAN J The Carn Brea hoard of 1749 Numism Chron 6th ser 8 1948 235 6 this does not analyse the hoard correctly so ALLEN D F art cit 287 and for the first 20th century republication of the hoard Allen D 1944 I The Belgic Dynasties of Britain and their Coins Archaeologia 90 1 46 doi 10 1017 S0261340900009747 About Carn Brea Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Carn Brea Protection Group Retrieved 20 August 2007 Pictures of Carn Brea Archived 8 August 2001 at the Wayback Machine Parish of Saint Illogan Retrieved 20 August 2007 Carn Brea Castle Archived 29 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine Follies and Monuments FollyTowers com Retrieved 20 August 2007 Some frauds of a very peculiar and extensive nature have been discovered The Times 18 July 1829 p 4 Carn Brea Castle Redruth Cornwall Archived 29 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Restaurants in Cornwall EatOutCornwall com Retrieved 20 August 2007 The Scotsman Harry Potter s stolen car appears at castle The Scotsman Publications Ltd 19 May 2006 Retrieved 30 October 2006 The Bassets of Tehidy Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Cornish History Reference Files CornishWorld net Retrieved 20 August 2007 Parliamentary Intelligence House of Lords The Times 3 June 1828 As shown by the stone inscription on the south of the monument See inscription text on Basset Cross photograph Tuesday s Post Jackson s Oxford Journal 17 September 1836 A chaste and elegant monument from the chisel of Westmacott put up in parish of Illogan Cornwall to the memory of the late Lord De Dunstanville Curran Bob 2005 Celtic Lore amp Legend meet the gods heroes kings fairies monsters and ghosts of yore New Page Books p 36 ISBN 978 1 56414 786 8 Tangye 1981 Historic Environment Service 2006 p 3 Noall Cyril 1963 The Cornish Midsummer Eve bonfire celebrations Federation of Old Cornwall Societies Publications Federation of Old Cornwall Societies OCLC 30233069 Bridgewater Mercury This could be the last time Newsquest Media Group 3 January 2003 Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 30 October 2006 Smallholder Ban What Ban Newsquest Media Group 28 December 2005 Retrieved 30 October 2006 References EditActon Bob 2001 Exploring Cornwall s tramway trails Volume 1 2 ed Landfall ISBN 978 1 873443 41 5 Historic Environment Service 2006 Carn Brea Illogan Cornwall HEATH Management Assessment PDF Cornwall County Council Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 19 August 2007 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Mercer R J 1981 Mercer R J et al Excavations at Carn Brea Illogan Cornwall 1970 73 A Neolithic Fortified Complex of the Third Millennium BC Cornish Archaeology 20 Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Retrieved 30 October 2006 Tangye Michael 1981 Carn Brea brief history and guide Dyllansow Truran ISBN 978 0 907566 12 0 Noall Cyril 2003 The Cornish Midsummer Eve Bonfire Celebrations Federation of Old Cornwall Societies ISBN 978 0 902660 31 1 External links EditMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carn Brea Parish Council website Cornish Archaeological Society Roman Britain org records of Romano British Settlement of Carn Brea Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carn Brea Redruth amp oldid 1175223018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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