Dartmoor


Click for larger image - Dartmeet, Dartmoor

Click for larger image - Cornwood, Dartmoor

 

Dartmoor

Click for larger image - Cornwood, Dartmoor

Click for larger image - Cornwood, Dartmoor

Click for larger image - Cornwood, Dartmoor


Picture Gallery optimised for Internet Explorer & Netscape 5 and above.
The ancient clapper bridge over the Dart boulder-strewn river at Dartmeet stands dwarfed by the more recent stone road bridge.

Dartmeet is in the centre of Dartmoor - a vast tract of wild moorland in England's Westcountry. There are many Megalithic sites - stone circles, stone rows, logan rocking stones and ancient stone crosses.

Tors of great power proliferate, punctuated by wild water: springs and gurgling streams gather themselves into the rivers Dart, Plym and Torridge before rejoining the sea on the south and north coasts of Devon.

A number of ancient Ways traverse the treacherous marshes and mires of the moor, most notably the Abbot's Way which leads from Buckfast Abbey to Buckland Abbey. In the northern part of the moor are Cut Lane, King's Way, and the Lich Path. Other named tracks are Church Way, Drift Lane, Dartmoor Path, Lydford Path and 2 Black Lanes, as described in detail in Crossing's Guide to Dartmoor.

Each of these track names serve to tell us something of their history - and the two "Black" lanes are particularly interesting in view of Alfred Watkins' researches relating to place names in The Old Straight Track, where he concludes that the words black and cole / coal in place names may indicate a geomantic origin.


Selected Bibliography:

 




Google

 

Web

pilgrimsall.org