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Hill figure

A hill figure is a large visual representation created by cutting into a steep hillside and revealing the underlying geology. It is a type of geoglyph usually designed to be seen from afar rather than above. In some cases trenches are dug and rubble made from material brighter than the natural bedrock is placed into them. The new material is often chalk, a soft and white form of limestone, leading to the alternative name of chalk figure for this form of art.

The Cerne Abbas Giant chalk figure, near the village of Cerne Abbas in Dorset, England, is made by a turf-cut.
The Uffington White Horse at Uffington, Oxfordshire
The 18th-century Westbury White Horse near Westbury, Wiltshire

Hill figures cut in grass are a phenomenon especially seen in England, where examples include the Cerne Abbas Giant, the Uffington White Horse, and the Long Man of Wilmington, as well as the "lost" carvings at Cambridge, Oxford and Plymouth Hoe. From the 18th century onwards, many further ones were added. Many figures long thought to be ancient have been found to be relatively recent when subjected to modern archaeological scrutiny, at least in their current form. Only the Uffington White Horse appears to retain a prehistoric shape, while the Cerne Abbas Giant may be prehistoric, Romano-British, or Early Modern. Nevertheless, these figures, and their possible lost companions, have been iconic in the English people's conception of their past.

History edit

The creation of hill figures has been practised since prehistory and can include human and animal forms. Cutting of horses is common, as well as more abstract symbols and, in the modern era, advertising brands.

The reasons for the creation for the figures are varied and obscure. The Uffington Horse probably held political significance, since the figure dominates the valley below. It probably dates to the British Iron Age since coins have been found exhibiting the symbol. The Cerne Abbas Giant might have been a work of political satire likely of the Early Modern period.[1] Wiltshire is a county with a large number of White Horses; 14 have been recorded.[2] The figures are usually created by the cutting away of the top layer of relatively poor soil on suitable hillsides. This exposes the white chalk beneath, which contrasts well with the short green hill grass, and the image is clearly visible for a considerable distance. Although most of the figures are of great age, many are relatively new. Devizes in Wiltshire created a large white horse for the 2000 Millennium celebrations and in October 2009 celebrated this with an aerial photo of volunteers making the figure 10 for an aerial photo.[3]

Figures must be maintained to remain visible, and local people often work regularly to restore or maintain a local landmark, though two cuttings of military badges at Sutton Mandeville, Wiltshire, are becoming lost. A map of Australia at Compton Chamberlayne, Wiltshire, was lost in 2005.

Similar pictures exist elsewhere in the world, notably the far larger Nazca Lines in Peru, which are on flat land but visible from hills in the area. However, these were made in desert terrain rather than on grassy hillsides, so have not become overgrown and thus have survived much longer without maintenance. The Nazca Lines were formed by removing loose stones from the lines to expose the whiteish underlying soil, which is not itself dug.

Terminology edit

Geoglyph is the usual term for structures carved into or otherwise made from rock formations.

In 1949, Morris Marples "half-humorously" coined the words "leucippotomy for the cutting of white horses and gigantotomy for the cutting of giants on rare occasions".[4][5][6] Though neither word appears in the Oxford English Dictionary, the terms occasionally appear in print.[7]

Construction edit

Until recently, three methods were used to construct white hill figures.

  • The stripping method: where the soil is thin, the turf or soil is stripped away to expose the chalk underneath. This produces quick results but the figure needs regular maintenance, as it would soon become overgrown. This was a practice for hill figures but not as much for horses. The Laverstock Panda at Laverstock near Salisbury, Wiltshire was constructed this way in 1968 and is now lost. Traces of figures of this type are not usually found after the figure is overgrown.
  • The covering method: rocks are placed on top of the turf. This method is normally used when there is no underlying chalk, the chalk is deep or tools are not available. The maintenance for these figures is very high. There are several examples, such as the Woolbury White Horse in Hampshire. This method leaves no trace of the figure's existence when overgrown, as is the case of the lost Fovant Badges in Wiltshire.
  • The trenching method, which is by far the most common method of hill figure construction. The underlying chalk where some white horses are constructed is not near the surface, so a trench is dug and chalk from another site is used to fill it. The Uffington White Horse in Oxfordshire is the prime example of this method. This method is invasive in the hillside and allows traces of the figure to be seen even when the figure has been overgrown for many years, an example being the original Devizes White Horse, cut in 1845 and lost sometime in the mid 20th century, but rediscovered when traces reappeared.

The biggest threat to white horses and other hill figures is natural vegetation covering the figures. In the case of chalk figures, natural vegetation encroaches from the edges and can grow on soil washed onto the figure by rain. Water erosion can also be a problem on steep or gentle slopes, because rain can wash the chalk off the horse, or soil onto the horse. Larger horses are more susceptible to this. If chalk is washed off the horse, the horse gradually creeps down the slope; or if soil is washed onto the horse, it collects onto the lower edges and the horse gradually climbs up the slope. A solution is to provide drainage, either using run-off drains, as at Uffington White Horse, or a french ditch.

Human figures edit

While presumed to be of prehistoric origin, surviving examples may have been created only within the last four hundred years.[8] Of these giants only two survive: one near the village of Cerne Abbas, to the north of Dorchester, in Dorset and one at Wilmington, Long Man civil parish in the Wealden District of East Sussex. Examples located at Oxford, Cambridge, and on Plymouth Hoe can no longer be seen with the naked eye.[8][9][10]

The Osmington White Horse carries a rider (King George III) but is not considered an example of gigantotomy due to the name of the figure referring to the horse.

Cerne Abbas Giant edit

The Cerne Abbas Giant, also referred to as the "Rude Man" or the "Rude Giant", is a hill figure of a giant naked man 180 ft (55 m) high, 167 ft (51 m) wide.[1] The figure is carved into the side of a steep hill, and is best viewed from the opposite side of the valley or from the air. The carving is formed by a trench 12 in (30 cm) wide,[1] and about the same depth, which has been cut through grass and earth into the underlying chalk. In his right hand the giant holds a knobbled club 120 ft (37 m) in length.[1]

Its history cannot be traced back further than the late 17th century, making an origin during the Celtic, Roman or even Early Medieval periods difficult to prove. Above and to the right of the Giant's head is an earthwork known as the "Trendle", or "Frying Pan". Medieval writings refer to this location as "Trendle Hill", but make no mention of the giant, leading to the conclusion that it was probably only carved about 400 years ago. In contrast, the Uffington White Horse – an unquestionably prehistoric hill figure on the Berkshire Downs – was noticed and recorded by medieval authors.[1][11] In 2021, a sediment analysis by the National Trust indicated an origin in the date range of 700 CE to 1100 CE, surprising historians who did not expect it to be medieval.[12]

In 2008, overgrowth forced a re-chalking of the giant,[13] with 17 tonnes of new chalk being poured in and tamped down by hand.[14]

Long Man of Wilmington edit

 
The Long Man of Wilmington seen from a distance

The Long Man of Wilmington is located on one of the steep slopes of Windover Hill, six miles (9.7 km) northwest of Eastbourne. The figure is 227 feet (69 m) tall and designed to look in proportion when viewed from below, and is shown holding two staves. The earliest record was made by the surveyor John Rowley in the year 1710. This drawing suggests that the original figure was a shadow or indentation in the grass, rather than the solid outline of a human figure. The staves were not depicted as a rake and scythe as was once thought, and the head was a helmet shape. Sir William Borrow's drawing of 1766 shows the figure holding a rake and a scythe, both shorter than the staves.[15]

Before 1874, the Long Man's outline was only visible in certain light conditions as a different shade in the hillside grass, or after a light fall of snow. In that year an antiquarian marked out the outline with yellow bricks, later cemented together. It has been claimed that the 'restoration' process distorted the position of the feet, an assertion backed up by several who had been familiar with the figure before 1874, and also by later resistivity surveys.[16] It has also been suggested that it removed the Long Man's genitalia, though there is no historical or archaeological evidence which supports that claim.[15][17] A wide range of dates of origin have been proposed for the Long Man, but more recent archaeological work done by the University of Reading suggests that the figure dates from the 16th or 17th century AD.[18]

Plymouth Hoe giants edit

Until the early 17th century large outline images of the two giants, perhaps Gog and Magog (or Goemagot and Corineus) had for a long time been cut into the turf of Plymouth Hoe exposing the white limestone beneath.[19] An early and explicit reference was made to them by Richard Carew in 1602.[20] At one time these figures were periodically re-cut and cleaned but no trace of them remains today.[19][21]

Firle Corn edit

Firle Corn in Firle, Sussex is a nearly-lost hill figure which can be seen with the aid of infrared photography. Now looking more like a small ear of corn or a strange weapon than a human figure, there is a legend suggesting that a giant called Gill was once cut on this same hill and that he was considered an adversary of the Long Man of Wilmington not far away.[22] According to one story, the giant on Firle Beacon threw his hammer at the Wilmington giant and killed him, and that the figure on the hillside marks the place where his body fell.[23]

Homer Simpson edit

As a publicity stunt for the opening of The Simpsons Movie on 16 July 2007, a giant Homer Simpson brandishing a doughnut was outlined in water-based biodegradable paint to the left of the Cerne Abbas Giant. This act angered local neopagans, who pledged to perform "rain magic" to wash the figure away.[24][25]

Horse figures edit

 
The Litlington White Horse in the village of Litlington, East Sussex

There are 16 known white horse hill figures in the UK, or 17 including the painted one at Cleadon Hills.[26]

The Luzley White Horse near Mossley, cut in 1981, was neglected in 1992 after its creator died, but was not completely lost for some time.

Eight of the current white horses, and at least five of the lost figures, are in Wiltshire. The white horse is now generally considered a symbol of Wiltshire. An 1872 sketch of the Cherhill White Horse was later featured in the unofficial flag of Wiltshire, the White Horse Flag. It was designed after its designer, Chrys Fear, decided the white horse symbol had a stronger connection to Wiltshire than the Great Bustard on the official flag. Additionally, for the third millennium, it was proposed that a white horse should feature on one of the surrounding hills in Devizes (it became the Devizes Millennium White Horse). Smaller white horses now feature in Wiltshire, such as a replica of the Devizes White Horse in a Devizes primary school and two proposed white horses to feature on a roundabout in Marlborough (both towns already have larger white horses). Liddington Hill near Swindon is the latest location in Wiltshire to have a proposed white horse, in the early 2000s, although the idea was abandoned.

List of UK figures edit

Current figures edit

Name County Cutting date
Uffington White Horse Oxfordshire 1000 BC
Westbury White Horse Wiltshire 1600s
Cherhill White Horse Wiltshire 1780
Mormond White Horse Aberdeenshire 1790s
Marlborough White Horse Wiltshire 1804
Osmington White Horse Dorset 1808
Alton Barnes White Horse Wiltshire 1812
Hackpen White Horse Wiltshire 1838
Woolbury White Horse Hampshire Before 1846
Kilburn White Horse North Yorkshire 1857
Broad Town White Horse Wiltshire 1864
Cleadon White Horse South Tyneside Before 1887
Litlington White Horse East Sussex 1924
Pewsey White Horse Wiltshire 1937
Devizes White Horse Wiltshire 1999
Heeley White Horse South Yorkshire 2000
Folkestone White Horse Kent 2003
Lutterworth white horses Leicestershire 2012
Millennium white horse, Devizes Wiltshire 2012
Beverley Racecourse white horses East Riding 2010s
Black Horse of Bush Howe Cumbria ? (may be a natural figure)

Lost figures edit

Name County Cut Lost Replaced by
Old Westbury White Horse Wiltshire 878? Before 1778 New Westbury White Horse
The Giant Ghyst Bristol Before 1480[27]
Plymouth Hoe Gogmagog Devon Before 1486[28] Late 1660s
Wandlebury Hill Gogmagog Cambridgeshire Before 1605 Around 1730
Old Pewsey White Horse Wiltshire 1785 1940 New Pewsey White Horse
Pitstone Hill White Horse Buckinghamshire 1809? Before 1990
Old Litlington White Horse Sussex 1838 1924 New Litlington White Horse
Old Devizes White Horse Wiltshire 1845 Before 1999 New Devizes White Horse
Inkpen White Horse Wiltshire 1868? Before 1990
Hindhead White Horse Surrey Before 1913 1939
Red Horse of Tysoe Warwickshire Before 1607 Remains lost in 1964 -
Red Horse of Tysoe "IV" Warwickshire 1800 1910
Rockley White Horse Wiltshire Discovered 1948 After 1950, before 1990
Tan Hill White Horse/Donkey Wiltshire Before 1975 After 1975, before 1990
Mossley White Horse (aka Luzley White Horse) Greater Manchester 1981[29] After 1994, before 1999
Folkestone White Horse mock-up Kent 1999 1999 Folkestone White Horse
Laverstock Panda Wiltshire 1969 1984
Pont Abraham Tea Pot and Cup Wales 1992 2009

Possible figures edit

Name County Discovery date Note
Whittlesford White Horse Cambridge 2004 A crop mark resembling a horse discovered 2004, possibly hinting a previous horse was cut here.
Liddington White Horse Wiltshire 2000s Plans for this white horse (including designs) occurred in the 2000s, but the project never happened.
Red Horse of Tysoe "VI" Warwickshire 2010s A forthcoming recutting of the Red Horse of Tysoe at the Vale of the Red Horse.

List of international figures edit

Name Location Cut Lost
Bloemfontein White Horse Bloemfontein, South Africa Before 1932 N/A
Cockington Green white horse Cockington Green, Canberra, Australia 20th or 21st century N/A
Georgia white horse Georgia, United States 20th or 21st century N/A
Juárez White Horse Ciudad Juárez, Mexico Unknown N/A
Riff Country horse Iourdanan, Morocco Unknown Unknown
Spis Castle Celtic Horse Žehra, Slovakia 2000s N/A
Tunis Horses Tunis, Tunisia Unknown N/A
Waimate White Horse Waimate, New Zealand 1968 N/A

The horses in Cockington Green, Georgia and Juárez are all based on the style of or direct copies of the Uffington White Horse.[citation needed]

Lost figures edit

Since hill figures must be maintained by the removal of regrown turf, only those that motivate the local populace to look after them survive. Surviving ancient figures all have an associated fair or ceremony that involves maintaining them.[citation needed]

Unmaintained figures gradually fade away.[30] Firle Corn at Firle Beacon, Sussex could be a lost figure. Its existence is suggested by infrared photography. If it is a lost figure, its age is uncertain, and unlikely prehistoric in origin, as only one figure in the UK has been shown to be of this age, the Uffington White Horse.[citation needed]

There have been horses at Devizes and Pewsey, both in Wiltshire, that have been lost but replaced by new ones in the 20th century.[30]

Influence on other art forms edit

The white horses of Wiltshire, of which there are currently nine, have inspired other sculptures in the county. Julive Livsey's sculpture White Horse Pacified (1987) in Shaw, Swindon was inspired by the white horses.[31] Furthermore, Charlotte Moreton created the steel sculpture White Horse (2010) for Solstice Park, Amesbury, taking influence from the white horses.[32] A roundabout in Westbury, which features views of Westbury White Horse, features a canvas of the horse, with the horse also featuring in a mosaic in the town. When the county was choosing an official flag in 2006–07, a suggested nominee was the "White Horse Flag", featuring Cherhill White Horse. The Town Flag of Pewsey, registered in September 2014, features the Pewsey White Horse at its centre.

Some of the most significant figures edit

England edit

In England there are at least fifty landscape figures, the majority of which are in the south.[33] (The phrase "forensic photo", relating to a few lost figures, refers to photos taken with appropriate filters, in optimum lighting, often at times of severe drought or snow covering, to bring out features no longer normally visible.)

Scotland edit

Gallery edit

Drawings gallery edit

In fiction edit

In film edit

  • Alton Barnes White Horse appears, very briefly, in the music video for Staying Out for the Summer by Dodgy.[38]
  • Cherhill White Horse features in the music video for Doctorin' the Tardis by The Timelords.
  • Uffington White Horse (in animated form) features in the music video for Sonnet by The Verve.
  • Westbury White Horse features in the music video for Breathe by Midge Ure, alongside a temporary figure of the sun.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Cerne Abbas Giant". sacred-destinations.com.
  2. ^ "Wiltshire White Horses". wiltshirewhitehorses.org.uk.
  3. ^ . devizeheritage.org.uk. Archived from the original on 4 March 2015. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  4. ^ Morris Marples, "White horses and other hill figures", Publisher: A. Sutton, 1949 (reprint), ISBN 0904387593, 9780904387599, 223 pages, page 16
  5. ^ John Timpson, "Timpson's Other England: A Look at the Unusual and the Definitely Odd", Publisher: Jarrold, 1994, ISBN 071170645X, 9780711706453, 224 pages, page 68
  6. ^ Harold William Timperley, "The Vale of Pewsey", Publisher Hale, 1954, 230 pages, page 181
  7. ^ "Top 10: Britain's largest hill figures", The Telegraph, undated, attributed to Top 10 of Britain: 250 Quintessentially British Lists by Russell Ash, published by Hamlyn
  8. ^ a b Bergamar, Kate (1997). Discovering Hill Figures. Pub. Shire. ISBN 0-7478-0345-5.
  9. ^ . fortunecity.com. Archived from the original on 15 March 2004. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  10. ^ . Bed & Breakfast and Self Catering Holiday Accommodation in beautiful Wiltshire. Archived from the original on 2013-04-10.
  11. ^ Hutchins, John (1973) [1742]. The History and Antiquities of the County of Dorset. Robert Douch (Contributor). Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 0-87471-336-6.
  12. ^ "Cerne Giant in Dorset dates from Anglo-Saxon times, analysis suggests". 2021-05-12. Retrieved 2021-05-12.
  13. ^ BBC (June 20, 2008). "Sheep shortage hits Giant's look". BBC. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
  14. ^ Morris, Steven (2008-09-16). "Volunteers restore historic giant of Cerne Abbas to his former glory". The Guardian. Guardian Newspapers. Retrieved 2008-09-17.
  15. ^ a b The Modern Antiquarian, Julian Cope, Thorsons 1998
  16. ^ Castleden, Rodney (2002). "Shape-shifting: The changing outline of the Long Man of Wilmington". Sussex Archaeological Collections. 140 (140): 83–95. doi:10.5284/1085966.
  17. ^ The Unknown, Issue Jan 1986
  18. ^ Derbyshire, David (2 October 2003). "Prehistoric Long Man is '16th century new boy'". Daily Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group. Retrieved 2009-02-08.
  19. ^ a b Gray, Todd (2003). Lost Devon: Creation, Change and Destruction over 500 Years. Exeter, Devon: The Mint Press. p. 153. ISBN 1-903356-32-6.
  20. ^ The Survey of Cornwall, text here:[1]. Note that Carew refers to Plymouth Hoe as "the Hawe at Plymmouth".
  21. ^ Bracken, C. W. (1931). A History of Plymouth and her Neighbours. Plymouth: Underhill. p. 4.
  22. ^ "Firle Corn". hows.org.uk.
  23. ^ Scraps of Folklore Collected by John Philipps Emslie, C. S. Burne, Folklore, Vol. 26, No. 2. (Jun. 30, 1915), pp. 153-170.
  24. ^ "Wish for rain to wash away Homer". BBC News. 2007-07-16.
  25. ^ Hamblin, Cory (2009). Serket's Movies: Commentary and Trivia on 444 Movies. Dorrance Publishing. p. 327. ISBN 9781434996053. Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  26. ^ "Hillfigures.co.uk - A site dedicated to information about hill figures". www.hillfigures.co.uk. Retrieved 2022-12-04.
  27. ^ Clark, John (2016). "Trojans at Totnes and Giants on the Hoe: Geoffrey of Monmouth, Historical Fiction and Geographical Reality". Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association. The Devonshire Association. 148: 110. ISSN 0309-7994. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  28. ^ Clark, John (2016). "Trojans at Totnes and Giants on the Hoe: Geoffrey of Monmouth, Historical Fiction and Geographical Reality". Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association. The Devonshire Association. 148: 108–111. ISSN 0309-7994. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
  29. ^ You Know You’ve Spent Too Long in Tameside If… | East of the M60
  30. ^ a b c d e Hows, Mark. "Lost Figures". Hillfigure site. Retrieved 2014-01-20.
  31. ^ Staying in the public eye (From Swindon Advertiser)
  32. ^ "SOLSTICE PARK SCULPTURES" (PDF). Solsticepark.com. Retrieved August 29, 2015.
  33. ^ Nigel Clarke, The Rude Man of Cerne Abbas and Other Wessex Oddities, Lyme Regis, Nigel J. Clarke Publications, ISBN 978-0-907683-07-0
  34. ^ Bergamar, Kate (1997). Discovering Hill Figures. Pub. Shire. ISBN 0-7478-0345-5. P. 7 - 9.
  35. ^ Plenderleath, Rev. W. C. (1892). The White Horses of the West of England. Pub. Allen & Storr, London. P. 38.
  36. ^ Bergamar, Kate (1997). Discovering Hill Figures. Pub. Shire. ISBN 0-7478-0345-5. P. 10 - 12.
  37. ^ "Lamb Down Military Badge". hows.org.uk. Retrieved 2014-09-26.
  38. ^ Staying Out For The Summer - Dodgy on YouTube

Bibliography edit

  • Bergamar, Kate (1997). Discovering Hill Figures (4th ed.). Princes Risborough: Shire. ISBN 0-7478-0345-5.
  • Newman, Paul (1997). Lost Gods of Albion: The Chalk Hill-Figures of Britain (2nd ed.). Stroud: Sutton. ISBN 0-7509-1563-3.
  • Plenderleath, W. C. (1892). The White Horses of the West of England (2nd ed.). London: Allen & Storr.

Mapping edit

External links edit

  • The Hillfigure Homepage
  • Aerial Images of UK (England & Wales): Hill Figures
  • Wiltshire White Horses
  • Wiltshire's Horses
  • Australian badges in Wiltshire (Fovant)
  • Waimate White Horse

hill, figure, hill, figure, large, visual, representation, created, cutting, into, steep, hillside, revealing, underlying, geology, type, geoglyph, usually, designed, seen, from, afar, rather, than, above, some, cases, trenches, rubble, made, from, material, b. A hill figure is a large visual representation created by cutting into a steep hillside and revealing the underlying geology It is a type of geoglyph usually designed to be seen from afar rather than above In some cases trenches are dug and rubble made from material brighter than the natural bedrock is placed into them The new material is often chalk a soft and white form of limestone leading to the alternative name of chalk figure for this form of art The Cerne Abbas Giant chalk figure near the village of Cerne Abbas in Dorset England is made by a turf cut The Uffington White Horse at Uffington OxfordshireThe 18th century Westbury White Horse near Westbury WiltshireHill figures cut in grass are a phenomenon especially seen in England where examples include the Cerne Abbas Giant the Uffington White Horse and the Long Man of Wilmington as well as the lost carvings at Cambridge Oxford and Plymouth Hoe From the 18th century onwards many further ones were added Many figures long thought to be ancient have been found to be relatively recent when subjected to modern archaeological scrutiny at least in their current form Only the Uffington White Horse appears to retain a prehistoric shape while the Cerne Abbas Giant may be prehistoric Romano British or Early Modern Nevertheless these figures and their possible lost companions have been iconic in the English people s conception of their past Contents 1 History 1 1 Terminology 2 Construction 3 Human figures 3 1 Cerne Abbas Giant 3 2 Long Man of Wilmington 3 3 Plymouth Hoe giants 3 4 Firle Corn 3 5 Homer Simpson 4 Horse figures 4 1 List of UK figures 4 1 1 Current figures 4 1 2 Lost figures 4 1 3 Possible figures 4 2 List of international figures 5 Lost figures 6 Influence on other art forms 7 Some of the most significant figures 7 1 England 7 2 Scotland 8 Gallery 9 Drawings gallery 10 In fiction 10 1 In film 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 Mapping 15 External linksHistory editThe creation of hill figures has been practised since prehistory and can include human and animal forms Cutting of horses is common as well as more abstract symbols and in the modern era advertising brands The reasons for the creation for the figures are varied and obscure The Uffington Horse probably held political significance since the figure dominates the valley below It probably dates to the British Iron Age since coins have been found exhibiting the symbol The Cerne Abbas Giant might have been a work of political satire likely of the Early Modern period 1 Wiltshire is a county with a large number of White Horses 14 have been recorded 2 The figures are usually created by the cutting away of the top layer of relatively poor soil on suitable hillsides This exposes the white chalk beneath which contrasts well with the short green hill grass and the image is clearly visible for a considerable distance Although most of the figures are of great age many are relatively new Devizes in Wiltshire created a large white horse for the 2000 Millennium celebrations and in October 2009 celebrated this with an aerial photo of volunteers making the figure 10 for an aerial photo 3 Figures must be maintained to remain visible and local people often work regularly to restore or maintain a local landmark though two cuttings of military badges at Sutton Mandeville Wiltshire are becoming lost A map of Australia at Compton Chamberlayne Wiltshire was lost in 2005 Similar pictures exist elsewhere in the world notably the far larger Nazca Lines in Peru which are on flat land but visible from hills in the area However these were made in desert terrain rather than on grassy hillsides so have not become overgrown and thus have survived much longer without maintenance The Nazca Lines were formed by removing loose stones from the lines to expose the whiteish underlying soil which is not itself dug Terminology edit Geoglyph is the usual term for structures carved into or otherwise made from rock formations In 1949 Morris Marples half humorously coined the words leucippotomy for the cutting of white horses and gigantotomy for the cutting of giants on rare occasions 4 5 6 Though neither word appears in the Oxford English Dictionary the terms occasionally appear in print 7 Construction editUntil recently three methods were used to construct white hill figures The stripping method where the soil is thin the turf or soil is stripped away to expose the chalk underneath This produces quick results but the figure needs regular maintenance as it would soon become overgrown This was a practice for hill figures but not as much for horses The Laverstock Panda at Laverstock near Salisbury Wiltshire was constructed this way in 1968 and is now lost Traces of figures of this type are not usually found after the figure is overgrown The covering method rocks are placed on top of the turf This method is normally used when there is no underlying chalk the chalk is deep or tools are not available The maintenance for these figures is very high There are several examples such as the Woolbury White Horse in Hampshire This method leaves no trace of the figure s existence when overgrown as is the case of the lost Fovant Badges in Wiltshire The trenching method which is by far the most common method of hill figure construction The underlying chalk where some white horses are constructed is not near the surface so a trench is dug and chalk from another site is used to fill it The Uffington White Horse in Oxfordshire is the prime example of this method This method is invasive in the hillside and allows traces of the figure to be seen even when the figure has been overgrown for many years an example being the original Devizes White Horse cut in 1845 and lost sometime in the mid 20th century but rediscovered when traces reappeared The biggest threat to white horses and other hill figures is natural vegetation covering the figures In the case of chalk figures natural vegetation encroaches from the edges and can grow on soil washed onto the figure by rain Water erosion can also be a problem on steep or gentle slopes because rain can wash the chalk off the horse or soil onto the horse Larger horses are more susceptible to this If chalk is washed off the horse the horse gradually creeps down the slope or if soil is washed onto the horse it collects onto the lower edges and the horse gradually climbs up the slope A solution is to provide drainage either using run off drains as at Uffington White Horse or a french ditch Human figures editWhile presumed to be of prehistoric origin surviving examples may have been created only within the last four hundred years 8 Of these giants only two survive one near the village of Cerne Abbas to the north of Dorchester in Dorset and one at Wilmington Long Man civil parish in the Wealden District of East Sussex Examples located at Oxford Cambridge and on Plymouth Hoe can no longer be seen with the naked eye 8 9 10 The Osmington White Horse carries a rider King George III but is not considered an example of gigantotomy due to the name of the figure referring to the horse Cerne Abbas Giant edit Main article Cerne Abbas Giant The Cerne Abbas Giant also referred to as the Rude Man or the Rude Giant is a hill figure of a giant naked man 180 ft 55 m high 167 ft 51 m wide 1 The figure is carved into the side of a steep hill and is best viewed from the opposite side of the valley or from the air The carving is formed by a trench 12 in 30 cm wide 1 and about the same depth which has been cut through grass and earth into the underlying chalk In his right hand the giant holds a knobbled club 120 ft 37 m in length 1 Its history cannot be traced back further than the late 17th century making an origin during the Celtic Roman or even Early Medieval periods difficult to prove Above and to the right of the Giant s head is an earthwork known as the Trendle or Frying Pan Medieval writings refer to this location as Trendle Hill but make no mention of the giant leading to the conclusion that it was probably only carved about 400 years ago In contrast the Uffington White Horse an unquestionably prehistoric hill figure on the Berkshire Downs was noticed and recorded by medieval authors 1 11 In 2021 a sediment analysis by the National Trust indicated an origin in the date range of 700 CE to 1100 CE surprising historians who did not expect it to be medieval 12 In 2008 overgrowth forced a re chalking of the giant 13 with 17 tonnes of new chalk being poured in and tamped down by hand 14 Long Man of Wilmington edit nbsp The Long Man of Wilmington seen from a distanceMain article Long Man of Wilmington The Long Man of Wilmington is located on one of the steep slopes of Windover Hill six miles 9 7 km northwest of Eastbourne The figure is 227 feet 69 m tall and designed to look in proportion when viewed from below and is shown holding two staves The earliest record was made by the surveyor John Rowley in the year 1710 This drawing suggests that the original figure was a shadow or indentation in the grass rather than the solid outline of a human figure The staves were not depicted as a rake and scythe as was once thought and the head was a helmet shape Sir William Borrow s drawing of 1766 shows the figure holding a rake and a scythe both shorter than the staves 15 Before 1874 the Long Man s outline was only visible in certain light conditions as a different shade in the hillside grass or after a light fall of snow In that year an antiquarian marked out the outline with yellow bricks later cemented together It has been claimed that the restoration process distorted the position of the feet an assertion backed up by several who had been familiar with the figure before 1874 and also by later resistivity surveys 16 It has also been suggested that it removed the Long Man s genitalia though there is no historical or archaeological evidence which supports that claim 15 17 A wide range of dates of origin have been proposed for the Long Man but more recent archaeological work done by the University of Reading suggests that the figure dates from the 16th or 17th century AD 18 Plymouth Hoe giants edit Main article Plymouth Hoe Until the early 17th century large outline images of the two giants perhaps Gog and Magog or Goemagot and Corineus had for a long time been cut into the turf of Plymouth Hoe exposing the white limestone beneath 19 An early and explicit reference was made to them by Richard Carew in 1602 20 At one time these figures were periodically re cut and cleaned but no trace of them remains today 19 21 Firle Corn edit Main article Firle Corn Firle Corn in Firle Sussex is a nearly lost hill figure which can be seen with the aid of infrared photography Now looking more like a small ear of corn or a strange weapon than a human figure there is a legend suggesting that a giant called Gill was once cut on this same hill and that he was considered an adversary of the Long Man of Wilmington not far away 22 According to one story the giant on Firle Beacon threw his hammer at the Wilmington giant and killed him and that the figure on the hillside marks the place where his body fell 23 Homer Simpson edit As a publicity stunt for the opening of The Simpsons Movie on 16 July 2007 a giant Homer Simpson brandishing a doughnut was outlined in water based biodegradable paint to the left of the Cerne Abbas Giant This act angered local neopagans who pledged to perform rain magic to wash the figure away 24 25 Horse figures editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp The Litlington White Horse in the village of Litlington East SussexThere are 16 known white horse hill figures in the UK or 17 including the painted one at Cleadon Hills 26 The Luzley White Horse near Mossley cut in 1981 was neglected in 1992 after its creator died but was not completely lost for some time Eight of the current white horses and at least five of the lost figures are in Wiltshire The white horse is now generally considered a symbol of Wiltshire An 1872 sketch of the Cherhill White Horse was later featured in the unofficial flag of Wiltshire the White Horse Flag It was designed after its designer Chrys Fear decided the white horse symbol had a stronger connection to Wiltshire than the Great Bustard on the official flag Additionally for the third millennium it was proposed that a white horse should feature on one of the surrounding hills in Devizes it became the Devizes Millennium White Horse Smaller white horses now feature in Wiltshire such as a replica of the Devizes White Horse in a Devizes primary school and two proposed white horses to feature on a roundabout in Marlborough both towns already have larger white horses Liddington Hill near Swindon is the latest location in Wiltshire to have a proposed white horse in the early 2000s although the idea was abandoned List of UK figures edit Current figures edit Name County Cutting dateUffington White Horse Oxfordshire 1000 BCWestbury White Horse Wiltshire 1600sCherhill White Horse Wiltshire 1780Mormond White Horse Aberdeenshire 1790sMarlborough White Horse Wiltshire 1804Osmington White Horse Dorset 1808Alton Barnes White Horse Wiltshire 1812Hackpen White Horse Wiltshire 1838Woolbury White Horse Hampshire Before 1846Kilburn White Horse North Yorkshire 1857Broad Town White Horse Wiltshire 1864Cleadon White Horse South Tyneside Before 1887Litlington White Horse East Sussex 1924Pewsey White Horse Wiltshire 1937Devizes White Horse Wiltshire 1999Heeley White Horse South Yorkshire 2000Folkestone White Horse Kent 2003Lutterworth white horses Leicestershire 2012Millennium white horse Devizes Wiltshire 2012Beverley Racecourse white horses East Riding 2010sBlack Horse of Bush Howe Cumbria may be a natural figure Lost figures edit Name County Cut Lost Replaced byOld Westbury White Horse Wiltshire 878 Before 1778 New Westbury White HorseThe Giant Ghyst Bristol Before 1480 27 Plymouth Hoe Gogmagog Devon Before 1486 28 Late 1660s Wandlebury Hill Gogmagog Cambridgeshire Before 1605 Around 1730 Old Pewsey White Horse Wiltshire 1785 1940 New Pewsey White HorsePitstone Hill White Horse Buckinghamshire 1809 Before 1990 Old Litlington White Horse Sussex 1838 1924 New Litlington White HorseOld Devizes White Horse Wiltshire 1845 Before 1999 New Devizes White HorseInkpen White Horse Wiltshire 1868 Before 1990 Hindhead White Horse Surrey Before 1913 1939 Red Horse of Tysoe Warwickshire Before 1607 Remains lost in 1964 Red Horse of Tysoe IV Warwickshire 1800 1910 Rockley White Horse Wiltshire Discovered 1948 After 1950 before 1990 Tan Hill White Horse Donkey Wiltshire Before 1975 After 1975 before 1990 Mossley White Horse aka Luzley White Horse Greater Manchester 1981 29 After 1994 before 1999 Folkestone White Horse mock up Kent 1999 1999 Folkestone White HorseLaverstock Panda Wiltshire 1969 1984 Pont Abraham Tea Pot and Cup Wales 1992 2009 Possible figures edit Name County Discovery date NoteWhittlesford White Horse Cambridge 2004 A crop mark resembling a horse discovered 2004 possibly hinting a previous horse was cut here Liddington White Horse Wiltshire 2000s Plans for this white horse including designs occurred in the 2000s but the project never happened Red Horse of Tysoe VI Warwickshire 2010s A forthcoming recutting of the Red Horse of Tysoe at the Vale of the Red Horse List of international figures edit Name Location Cut LostBloemfontein White Horse Bloemfontein South Africa Before 1932 N ACockington Green white horse Cockington Green Canberra Australia 20th or 21st century N AGeorgia white horse Georgia United States 20th or 21st century N AJuarez White Horse Ciudad Juarez Mexico Unknown N ARiff Country horse Iourdanan Morocco Unknown UnknownSpis Castle Celtic Horse Zehra Slovakia 2000s N ATunis Horses Tunis Tunisia Unknown N AWaimate White Horse Waimate New Zealand 1968 N AThe horses in Cockington Green Georgia and Juarez are all based on the style of or direct copies of the Uffington White Horse citation needed Lost figures editSince hill figures must be maintained by the removal of regrown turf only those that motivate the local populace to look after them survive Surviving ancient figures all have an associated fair or ceremony that involves maintaining them citation needed Unmaintained figures gradually fade away 30 Firle Corn at Firle Beacon Sussex could be a lost figure Its existence is suggested by infrared photography If it is a lost figure its age is uncertain and unlikely prehistoric in origin as only one figure in the UK has been shown to be of this age the Uffington White Horse citation needed There have been horses at Devizes and Pewsey both in Wiltshire that have been lost but replaced by new ones in the 20th century 30 Influence on other art forms editThe white horses of Wiltshire of which there are currently nine have inspired other sculptures in the county Julive Livsey s sculpture White Horse Pacified 1987 in Shaw Swindon was inspired by the white horses 31 Furthermore Charlotte Moreton created the steel sculpture White Horse 2010 for Solstice Park Amesbury taking influence from the white horses 32 A roundabout in Westbury which features views of Westbury White Horse features a canvas of the horse with the horse also featuring in a mosaic in the town When the county was choosing an official flag in 2006 07 a suggested nominee was the White Horse Flag featuring Cherhill White Horse The Town Flag of Pewsey registered in September 2014 features the Pewsey White Horse at its centre Some of the most significant figures editEngland edit In England there are at least fifty landscape figures the majority of which are in the south 33 The phrase forensic photo relating to a few lost figures refers to photos taken with appropriate filters in optimum lighting often at times of severe drought or snow covering to bring out features no longer normally visible Alton Barnes white horse Wiltshire 1812 map 1 Broad Town White Horse Wiltshire 1864 map 2 Battle of Britain Memorial Capel le Ferne Kent 1993 map 3 Bulford Kiwi carved by New Zealand soldiers at Sling Camp in 1919map 4 Cerne Abbas Giant Dorset before 1694 possibly ancient map 5 Cleadon white horse Cleadon Tyne and Wear before 1887 Old Devizes White Horse or the Snobs horse Wiltshire 1845 New Devizes White Horse Wiltshire 1999 map 6 Cherhill White Horse Wiltshire 1780 map 7 Compton Chamberlayne Australia map Wiltshire 1916 photographed lost 2005 30 Folkestone White Horse Kent 2003 map 8 Fovant badges Wiltshire various dates from 1916 map 9 Hackpen or Broad Hinton or Winterbourne Bassett white horse Wiltshire 1838 map 10 Hindhead white horse Surrey before 1913 photographed now lost 30 Ham Hill or Inkpen white horse Wiltshire 1865 1877 Kilburn White Horse Yorkshire 1857 map 11 Lenham Cross Kent 1922 map 12 Old Litlington Alfriston white horse Sussex c 1838 New Litlington White Horse Sussex 1925 map 13 Marlborough White Horse or Preshute White Horse Wiltshire 1804 map 14 Osmington White Horse Dorset c 1808 map 15 Old Pewsey White Horse Wiltshire 1785 New Pewsey white horse Wiltshire 1937 map 16 Red Horse of Tysoe before 1607 forensic photos of first four editions fifth extant 1914 now lost Rockley white horse Wiltshire discovered 1948 photographed now lost 30 Shoreham Kent memorial cross Kent 1920 Sutton Mandeville military badges Wiltshire 1916 photographed to be lost soon Tan Hill white horse Wiltshire extant 1975 forensic photo now lost Uffington White Horse Bronze Age 1400 BC to 600 BC map 17 Westbury White Horse in the parish of Bratton Wiltshire before 1742 map 18 Whipsnade white lion on the Dunstable Downs Bedfordshire 1931 map 19 The Whitehawk hawk in Sheepcote Valley on the South Downs east of Brighton Sussex 2001 map 20 Whiteleaf Cross Monks Risborough Buckinghamshire earliest ref 1742 map 21 Wye Crown Kent 1902 map 22 Long Man of Wilmington Sussex c 16th century map 23 Scotland edit Mormond White Horse on the south west flank of Mormond Hill about 10 mi 16 km from Fraserburgh Aberdeenshire 34 35 Mormond White Stag on the other side of the hill from the Mormond Horse 36 Gallery edit nbsp The Cherhill White Horse near Cherhill nbsp The Kilburn White Horse near Kilburn North Yorkshire nbsp Lenham Cross on the North Downs in Kent nbsp Figure of a lion cut into the hillside the Whipsnade Zoo lion near Whipsnade nbsp Outline of a crown cut into the hillside Wye Crown at Wye Kent nbsp An offwhite triangle cut into the hillside Watlington White Mark nbsp Three military badges from the Fovant badges nbsp A kiwi cut into the hillside The Bulford Kiwi near Bulford nbsp A white cross cut into the hillside Whiteleaf Cross nbsp White horse with George III riding Osmington White Horse near Weymouth Dorset nbsp A stylised figure of a galloping white horse Folkestone White Horse on Cheriton Hill Folkestone nbsp Alton Barnes White Horse nbsp The Mormond Hill White Horse near Fraserburgh Aberdeenshire nbsp The Mormond Hill White Stag near Fraserburgh Aberdeenshire nbsp The Lamb Down Badge near Codford Wiltshire 37 nbsp Hackpen White Horse nbsp Pendle Hill marked with the date 1612 on the 400th anniversary of the Witch TrialsDrawings gallery editEnglish hill figures nbsp The Cherhill White Horse in 1892 nbsp The Westbury White Horse in 1772 top and as re cut in 1778 bottom nbsp The Uffington White Horse in 1885 nbsp Layout of the Long Man of Wilmington nbsp Layout of the Uffington White Horse nbsp Layout of the Cerne Abbas GiantIn fiction editThe Ballad of the White Horse by G K Chesterton The Scouring of the White Horse by Tom Hughes Sun Horse Moon Horse by Rosemary Sutcliff Witch Hill by Marcus Sedgwick Find the White Horse by Dick King Smith A Hat Full of Sky by Terry Pratchett The Dark Is Rising Sequence by Susan Cooper The Sandman by Neil Gaiman The Language of Bees by Laurie R King The Westbury White Horse is mentioned in the novel The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje but was not featured in the film of the novel In film edit Alton Barnes White Horse appears very briefly in the music video for Staying Out for the Summer by Dodgy 38 Cherhill White Horse features in the music video for Doctorin the Tardis by The Timelords Uffington White Horse in animated form features in the music video for Sonnet by The Verve Westbury White Horse features in the music video for Breathe by Midge Ure alongside a temporary figure of the sun See also editAnglo Saxon paganism Atacama Giant C Rock near Columbia University New York City English folklore Flag of Wiltshire Gog Magog Hills an unverified claim of geoglyphs Hillside letters a similar type of geoglyph common in the Western U S but using letters instead of figures Nazca Lines geoglyphs etched into the Nazca Plain Richard Long artist Vale of the Red Horse the location for a possible collection of 1 6 hill figures of a horse in Warwickhire White horse mythology References edit a b c d e Cerne Abbas Giant sacred destinations com Wiltshire White Horses wiltshirewhitehorses org uk Roundway Hill and covert Oliver s castle and Millennium White Horse devizeheritage org uk Archived from the original on 4 March 2015 Retrieved 5 July 2015 Morris Marples White horses and other hill figures Publisher A Sutton 1949 reprint ISBN 0904387593 9780904387599 223 pages page 16 John Timpson Timpson s Other England A Look at the Unusual and the Definitely Odd Publisher Jarrold 1994 ISBN 071170645X 9780711706453 224 pages page 68 Harold William Timperley The Vale of Pewsey Publisher Hale 1954 230 pages page 181 Top 10 Britain s largest hill figures The Telegraph undated attributed to Top 10 of Britain 250 Quintessentially British Lists by Russell Ash published by Hamlyn a b Bergamar Kate 1997 Discovering Hill Figures Pub Shire ISBN 0 7478 0345 5 Prehistorical Wiltshire fortunecity com Archived from the original on 15 March 2004 Retrieved 5 July 2015 Wayside of Wiltshire Bed amp Breakfast and Self Catering Holiday Accommodation in beautiful Wiltshire Archived from the original on 2013 04 10 Hutchins John 1973 1742 The History and Antiquities of the County of Dorset Robert Douch Contributor Oxford Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 0 87471 336 6 Cerne Giant in Dorset dates from Anglo Saxon times analysis suggests 2021 05 12 Retrieved 2021 05 12 BBC June 20 2008 Sheep shortage hits Giant s look BBC Retrieved 2008 06 20 Morris Steven 2008 09 16 Volunteers restore historic giant of Cerne Abbas to his former glory The Guardian Guardian Newspapers Retrieved 2008 09 17 a b The Modern Antiquarian Julian Cope Thorsons 1998 Castleden Rodney 2002 Shape shifting The changing outline of the Long Man of Wilmington Sussex Archaeological Collections 140 140 83 95 doi 10 5284 1085966 The Unknown Issue Jan 1986 Derbyshire David 2 October 2003 Prehistoric Long Man is 16th century new boy Daily Telegraph Telegraph Media Group Retrieved 2009 02 08 a b Gray Todd 2003 Lost Devon Creation Change and Destruction over 500 Years Exeter Devon The Mint Press p 153 ISBN 1 903356 32 6 The Survey of Cornwall text here 1 Note that Carew refers to Plymouth Hoe as the Hawe at Plymmouth Bracken C W 1931 A History of Plymouth and her Neighbours Plymouth Underhill p 4 Firle Corn hows org uk Scraps of Folklore Collected by John Philipps Emslie C S Burne Folklore Vol 26 No 2 Jun 30 1915 pp 153 170 Wish for rain to wash away Homer BBC News 2007 07 16 Hamblin Cory 2009 Serket s Movies Commentary and Trivia on 444 Movies Dorrance Publishing p 327 ISBN 9781434996053 Retrieved 30 June 2015 Hillfigures co uk A site dedicated to information about hill figures www hillfigures co uk Retrieved 2022 12 04 Clark John 2016 Trojans at Totnes and Giants on the Hoe Geoffrey of Monmouth Historical Fiction and Geographical Reality Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association The Devonshire Association 148 110 ISSN 0309 7994 Retrieved 2022 11 05 Clark John 2016 Trojans at Totnes and Giants on the Hoe Geoffrey of Monmouth Historical Fiction and Geographical Reality Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association The Devonshire Association 148 108 111 ISSN 0309 7994 Retrieved 2022 11 05 You Know You ve Spent Too Long in Tameside If East of the M60 a b c d e Hows Mark Lost Figures Hillfigure site Retrieved 2014 01 20 Staying in the public eye From Swindon Advertiser SOLSTICE PARK SCULPTURES PDF Solsticepark com Retrieved August 29 2015 Nigel Clarke The Rude Man of Cerne Abbas and Other Wessex Oddities Lyme Regis Nigel J Clarke Publications ISBN 978 0 907683 07 0 Bergamar Kate 1997 Discovering Hill Figures Pub Shire ISBN 0 7478 0345 5 P 7 9 Plenderleath Rev W C 1892 The White Horses of the West of England Pub Allen amp Storr London P 38 Bergamar Kate 1997 Discovering Hill Figures Pub Shire ISBN 0 7478 0345 5 P 10 12 Lamb Down Military Badge hows org uk Retrieved 2014 09 26 Staying Out For The Summer Dodgy on YouTubeBibliography editBergamar Kate 1997 Discovering Hill Figures 4th ed Princes Risborough Shire ISBN 0 7478 0345 5 Newman Paul 1997 Lost Gods of Albion The Chalk Hill Figures of Britain 2nd ed Stroud Sutton ISBN 0 7509 1563 3 Plenderleath W C 1892 The White Horses of the West of England 2nd ed London Allen amp Storr Mapping edit map 1 Alton Barnes white horse 51 22 20 81 N 001 50 53 49 W 51 3724472 N 1 8481917 W 51 3724472 1 8481917 Alton Barnes white horse map 2 Broad Town white horse 51 30 11 86 N 001 51 33 23 W 51 5032944 N 1 8592306 W 51 5032944 1 8592306 Broad Town white horse map 3 Battle of Britain Memorial 51 05 54 05 N 001 12 22 03 E 51 0983472 N 1 2061194 E 51 0983472 1 2061194 Battle of Britain Memorial map 4 Bulford Kiwi 51 11 38 84 N 001 42 54 20 W 51 1941222 N 1 7150556 W 51 1941222 1 7150556 Bulford Kiwi map 5 Cerne Abbas giant 50 48 49 17 N 002 28 29 09 W 50 8136583 N 2 4747472 W 50 8136583 2 4747472 Cerne Abbas giant map 6 New Devizes white horse 51 22 34 78 N 001 58 42 67 W 51 3763278 N 1 9785194 W 51 3763278 1 9785194 New Devizes white horse map 7 Cherhill white horse 51 25 30 90 N 001 55 47 36 W 51 4252500 N 1 9298222 W 51 4252500 1 9298222 Cherhill white horse map 8 Folkestone white horse 51 06 04 35 N 001 08 22 95 E 51 1012083 N 1 1397083 E 51 1012083 1 1397083 Folkestone white horse map 9 Fovant Down badges 51 03 14 32 N 001 58 43 94 W 51 0539778 N 1 9788722 W 51 0539778 1 9788722 Fovant Down badges map 10 Hackpen white horse 51 28 20 94 N 001 49 03 26 W 51 4724833 N 1 8175722 W 51 4724833 1 8175722 Hackpen white horse map 11 Kilburn white horse 54 13 29 26 N 001 12 45 65 W 54 2247944 N 1 2126806 W 54 2247944 1 2126806 Kilburn white horse map 12 Lenham Memorial Cross 51 14 31 99 N 000 43 44 33 E 51 2422194 N 0 7289806 E 51 2422194 0 7289806 Lenham Memorial Cross map 13 New Litlington White Horse 50 47 18 38 N 000 08 31 26 E 50 7884389 N 0 1420167 E 50 7884389 0 1420167 New Litlington white horse Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates map 14 Marlborough white horse 51 24 45 74 N 001 44 15 25 W 51 4127056 N 1 7375694 W 51 4127056 1 7375694 Marlborough white horse map 15 Osmington white horse 50 39 27 85 N 002 24 14 88 W 50 6577361 N 2 4041333 W 50 6577361 2 4041333 Osmington white horse map 16 new Pewsey white horse 51 19 16 42 N 001 45 23 34 W 51 3212278 N 1 7564833 W 51 3212278 1 7564833 new Pewsey white horse map 17 Uffington white horse 51 34 39 90 N 001 33 59 67 W 51 5777500 N 1 5665750 W 51 5777500 1 5665750 Uffington white horse map 18 Westbury white horse 51 15 48 91 N 002 08 49 07 W 51 2635861 N 2 1469639 W 51 2635861 2 1469639 Westbury white horse map 19 Whipsnade Zoo white lion 51 50 54 26 N 000 33 15 11 W 51 8484056 N 0 5541972 W 51 8484056 0 5541972 Whipsnade Zoo white lion map 20 Whitehawk hawk 50 49 16 29 N 000 05 36 14 W 50 8211917 N 0 0933722 W 50 8211917 0 0933722 Whitehawk hawk map 21 Whiteleaf Cross 51 43 43 23 N 000 48 42 48 W 51 7286750 N 0 8118000 W 51 7286750 0 8118000 Whiteleaf Cross map 22 Wye Crown 51 10 52 58 N 000 57 43 43 E 51 1812722 N 0 9620639 E 51 1812722 0 9620639 Wye Crown map 23 Long Man of Wilmington 50 48 36 21 N 000 11 16 88 E 50 8100583 N 0 1880222 E 50 8100583 0 1880222 Long Man of Wilmington External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to hill figure The Hillfigure Homepage Aerial Images of UK England amp Wales Hill Figures English Heritage Monument Class Description Wiltshire White Horses Wiltshire s Horses Australian badges in Wiltshire Fovant Waimate White Horse Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hill figure amp oldid 1151729983, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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