Everything about The Quantock Hills totally explained
The
Quantock Hills are a range of
hills west of
Bridgwater in
Somerset,
England. The highest point on the Quantocks is
Wills Neck, at . The hills are officially designated as the Quantock Hills
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
The hills run from the
Vale of Taunton Deane in the south, for about to the north-west, ending at
East Quantoxhead and
West Quantoxhead on the coast of the
Bristol Channel. They form the western border of
Sedgemoor and the
Somerset Levels. From the top of the hills on a clear day, it's possible to see
Glastonbury Tor and the
Mendips to the east,
Wales as far as the
Gower peninsula to the north, the
Brendon Hills and
Exmoor to the west, and the
Blackdown Hills to the south. Soil types and weather combine to support the hills' plants and animals. In 1970 an area of 6,194.5 acres (2,506.9 hectares) was designated as a
Biological Site of Special Scientific Interest.
They have been occupied since prehistoric times with
Bronze Age round barrows and
Iron Age hill forts. Evidence from
Roman times includes
silver coins discovered in
West Bagborough. In the later Saxon period,
King Alfred led the resistance to
Viking invasion, and
Watchet was plundered by Danes in 987 and 997. The hills were fought over during the
English Civil War and
Monmouth rebellion but are now a peaceful area popular with tourists and walkers. They explore paths such as the
Coleridge Way used by the poet
Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who lived in
Nether Stowey from 1797 to 1799, or visit places of interest such as
Quantock Lodge.
Etymology
The name first appears in
Saxon charters in around 880 AD as
Cantuctun and two centuries later in the
Domesday Book as
Cantoctona and
Cantetone. The name means
settlement by a rim or circle of hills;
Cantuc is
Celtic for a rim or circle, and
-ton or
-tun is
Old English for a settlement. An alternative meaning is
ridge of the Welshman, probably referring to a Saxon tribe that fought a battle locally. Further south there are newer
Middle and
Late Devonian rocks, known as Ilfracombe beds and Morte Slates. These rocks were laid down in a shallow sea and often contain irregular masses or veins of
gypsum, which was mined on the foreshore at
Watchet.
At
Blue Anchor the coloured
alabaster found in the cliffs gave rise to the name of the colour "Watchet Blue". The village has the only updraught brick
kiln known to have survived in Somerset. It was built around 1830 and was supplied by small vessels carrying limestone to the small landing
jetty. Now used as a garage, the kiln is thought to have operated until the 1870s, when the large-scale production of bricks in
Bridgwater rendered small brickyards uneconomic.
Climate
Along with the rest of
South West England, the Quantock Hills has a
temperate climate that's generally wetter and milder than the rest of
England. The mean temperature is approximately 10 °C (50 °F) and shows a
seasonal and a
diurnal variation, but because of the modifying effect of the sea the range is less than in most other parts of the
United Kingdom (UK). January is the coldest month with mean minimum temperatures between 1 °C (34 °F) and 2 °C (36 °F). July and August are the warmest months, with mean daily maxima around 21 °C (70 °F). December is normally the most cloudy month and June the sunniest. High pressure over the
Azores often brings clear skies to south-west England, particularly in summer.
Cloud often forms inland, especially near hills, and acts to reduce sunshine. The average annual sunshine totals around 1,600 hours. Rainfall tends to be associated with
Atlantic depressions or with convection. In summer, convection caused by solar surface heating sometimes forms shower clouds, and a large proportion of rain falls from showers and thunderstorms at this time of year. Average rainfall is around 31 to 35 inch (800 to 900 mm). About 8 to 15 days of snowfall is typical. From November to March, mean wind speeds are highest; winds are lightest from June to August. The predominant wind direction is from the south-west.
Ecology
In 1970 an area of 6,194.5 acres (2,506.9 hectares) in the Quantocks was designated as a
Biological Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). and many
Bronze Age round barrows (marked on maps as
tumulus, plural
tumuli), such as Thorncombe Barrow above
Bicknoller. Several ancient stones can be seen, such as the
Triscombe Stone and the Long Stone above
Holford. Many of the tracks along ridges of the Quantocks probably originated as ancient
ridgeways. The Dowsborough fort has an oval shape, with a single rampart and ditch (
univallate) following the contours of the hill top, enclosing an area of . The main entrance is to the east, towards
Nether Stowey, with a simpler opening to the north west, aligned with a ridgeway leading down to Holford. A
col to the south connects the hill to the main Stowey ridge, where a linear earthwork known as Dead Woman's Ditch cuts across the spur.
Little evidence exists of
Roman influence on the Quantock region beyond isolated finds and hints of transient forts. A Roman port was at
Combwich, and it's possible that a
Roman road ran from there to the Quantocks, because the names Nether Stowey and
Over Stowey come from the Old English
stan wey, meaning
stone way. In October 2001 a hoard of 4th-century
Roman silver was discovered in
West Bagborough. The 681 coins included two
denarii from the early 2nd century, and eight
miliarense and 671
siliqua dating to 337–367 AD. The majority were struck in the reigns of emperors
Constantius II and
Julian and derive from a range of mints including
Arles and
Lyons in
France,
Trier in
Germany and
Rome. The area remained under Romano-British
Celtic control until 681–685 AD, when
Centwine of Wessex pushed west from the
River Parrett, conquered the Welsh
King Cadwaladr, and occupied the rest of Somerset north to the Bristol Channel.
Saxon rule was later consolidated under
King Ine, who established a fort at Taunton in about 700 AD.
The first documentary evidence of the village of
Crowcombe is by
Æthelwulf of Wessex in 854, where it was spelt 'Cerawicombe'. At that time the manor belonged to
Glastonbury Abbey. In the later Saxon period,
King Alfred led the resistance to
Viking invasion from
Athelney, south-east of the Quantocks. Alfred established a series of forts and lookout posts linked by a military road, or
herepath, so his army could cover Viking movements at sea. The herepath has a characteristic form that's familiar on the Quantocks: a regulation wide track between avenues of trees growing from
hedge laying embankments. The herepath ran from the ford on the River Parrett at Combwich, past
Cannington Hill (fort) to Over Stowey, where it climbed the Quantocks along the line of the current Stowey road, to Crowcombe Park Gate. Then it went south along the ridge, to
Triscombe Stone. One branch may have led past Lydeard Hill and Buncombe Hill, back to Alfred's base at Athelney. The main branch descended the hills at Triscombe, then along the avenue to Red Post Cross, and west to the
Brendon Hills and
Exmoor.
After the
Norman conquest of England in 1066
William de Mohun was given land at
Dunster, Broomfield and
Quantoxhead, his son becoming
William de Mohun of Dunster 1st Earl of Somerset, while
William Malet received
Enmore. The mount is above the wide ditch which itself is deep. The
motte has a flat top with two large and two small mounds, which may be sites of towers, at the edge. The
blue lias rubble walling is the only visible structural remains of the castle, which stand on a conical earthwork with a ditch approximately in circumference. The castle was destroyed in the 15th century, which may have been as a penalty for the local
Lord Audley's involvement in the
Second Cornish Uprising of 1497 led by
Perkin Warbeck against the taxes of
Henry VII. Some of the stone was used in the building of Stowey Court in the village. Dunster shared the fate of many other Royalist castles and had its defences demolished to prevent any further use against Parliament. Sir
John Stawell of
Cothelstone had raised a small force at this own expense to defend the King. When
Taunton fell to parliamentary troops and was held by
Robert Blake, he attacked Stawell at
Bishops Lydeard and imprisoned him. After the
restoration Charles II conferred the title of
Baron Stawell on Blake's son Ralph. and many of his supporters were executed, including some by hanging at Nether Stowey and Cothelstone, The mine was established before 1725 and followed earlier exploration at Perry Hill,
East Quantoxhead. It was financed by the
Marquis of Buckingham until 1801 when it was closed, until various attempts were made to reopen it during the 19th century.
In 1724 the 14th-century spire of the Church of the Holy Ghost in Crowcombe was damaged by a lightning strike. The top section of the spire was removed and is now planted in the churchyard, and stone from the spire was used in the flooring of the church. Inside the church, carved bench-ends dating from 1534 depict such pagan subjects as the
Green Man and the legend of the men of Crowcombe fighting a two-headed
dragon.
Norton Fitzwarren was the site of a boat lift on the now unused section of the
Grand Western Canal from 1839 to 1867. A 300-person prisoner of war camp built here during
World War II housed
Italian prisoners from the
Western Desert Campaign and German prisoners from the
Battle of Normandy.
Footpaths
Poet
Samuel Taylor Coleridge lived in
Nether Stowey in the Quantocks from 1797 to 1799. In his memory a footpath, The
Coleridge Way, was set up by the
Exmoor park authorities. The route begins in Nether Stowey and crosses the Quantocks, the Brendon Hills and Exmoor before finishing in
Porlock.
The
Quantock Greenway is a
footpath that opened in 2001. The route of the path follows a figure of eight centred on
Triscombe. The northern loop, taking in
Crowcombe and
Holford, is long, and the southern loop to
Broomfield extends for . The path travels through many types of landscape, including deciduous and coniferous woodland, private parkland, grazed pasture and cropped fields.
Governance
The Quantock Hills were designated as an
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) in 1956, the first such designation in England under the
National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949. As they've the same landscape quality, AONBs may be compared to the
national parks of England and Wales. AONBs are created under the same legislation as the
national parks. Unlike AONBs, national parks have their own authorities and special legal powers to prevent unsympathetic development. By contrast, few statutory duties are imposed on local authorities within an AONB. However, further regulation and protection of AONBs was added by the
Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000.
Many of the villages on the Quantocks have their own
parish councils, which have some responsibility for local issues. They also elect councillors to
Somerset County Council and district councils, such as
Taunton Deane,
West Somerset and
Sedgemoor. Each of the villages is also part of a parliamentary constituency:
Taunton,
Yeovil, or
Bridgwater. The area is also part of the
South West England (European Parliament constituency) of the European Parliament.
Cultural references
Coleridge Cottage is a
cottage situated in
Nether Stowey. It was constructed in the 17th century as a building containing a parlour, kitchen and service room on the ground floor and three corresponding bed chambers above. It has been designated by
English Heritage as a grade II*
listed building. The poet
Samuel Taylor Coleridge lived here for three years from 1797 while he wrote
The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, part of
Christabel,
Frost at Midnight and
Kubla Khan. Having served for many years as Moore's Coleridge Cottage Inn, the building was acquired for the nation in 1908, and the following year it was handed over to the
National Trust. On
23 May 1998, following a £25,000 appeal by the Friends of Coleridge and the National Trust, two further rooms on the first floor were officially opened by
William Duke Coleridge, 5th Baron Coleridge.
Poet
William Wordsworth and his sister
Dorothy lived at
Alfoxton House in
Holford between July 1797 and June 1798, during the time of their friendship with Coleridge. The 2000 film
Pandaemonium, based on the lives of Wordsworth and Coleridge, was set in the hills.
Virginia and
Leonard Woolf spent a few days of their honeymoon at The Plough Inn, Holford, before continuing to the continent in 1912. They returned about a year later to try to help Virginia recover from one of her recurring nervous breakdowns.
The opening of
John le Carré's 1974 novel
Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is set in the Quantocks. The 1980
Doctor Who episode "
Shada" makes a sidelong reference to this region – the
Fourth Doctor (played by
Tom Baker) claims that walking through the Time Vortex "is a little trick I learned from a space-time mystic in the Quantocks". In the 1980s and 1990s, English novelist
Ruth Elwin Harris wrote her
Quantock Quartet, a set of novels centred on four sisters growing up around the Quantock Hills during the early 20th century. The novels were later reprinted by
Candlewick Press. The Quantocks were also the setting for the final episode of the third series (2006) of
Peep Show.
Places of interest
In the small village of
Aley is
Quantock Lodge, a green-grey 19th-century mansion built from
cockercombe tuff. It was the family home of
Henry Labouchere, 1st Baron Taunton, until the 1960s when it was converted into a school. In 2000, it became a centre for recreation and banqueting and summer camps for youths.
Broomfield is home to
Fyne Court. Originally the pleasure grounds of pioneer 19th-century electrician,
Andrew Crosse, it's now a
National Trust-owned
nature reserve and
visitor centre. The Quantock Hills AONB and the
Somerset Wildlife Trust have their headquarters at Fyne Court.
The Church of St Mary in
Kingston St Mary dates from the 13th century, but the tower is from the early 16th century and was re-roofed in 1952, with further restoration from 1976 to 1978. It is a three-stage
crenellated tower, with crocketed pinnacles, bracketed pinnacles set at angles, decorative pierced
merlons, and set-back
buttresses crowned with pinnacles. The decorative "hunky-punks" are perched high on the corners. These may be so named because the carvings are hunkering (squatting) and are "punch" (short and thick). They serve no function, unlike
gargoyles that carry off water. The churchyard includes tombs of the Warre family who owned nearby
Hestercombe House, a historic
country house in
Cheddon Fitzpaine visited by about 70,000 people per year. The site includes a
biological Site of Special Scientific Interest notified in 2000. The site is used for
roosting by
Lesser Horseshoe Bats, and has been designated as a
Special Area of Conservation (SAC). The house was used as the headquarters of the British
8th Corps during the
Second World War, and has been owned by
Somerset County Council since 1951. It is used as an administrative centre and a base for the
Somerset Fire and Rescue Service.
The
Norman Church of St Giles in
Thurloxton dates from the 14th century but is predominantly from the 15th century with 19th-century restoration, including the addition of the north aisle in 1868. It has been designated by
English Heritage as a grade II*
listed building. From October 1763 to January 1764 the vicar was the diarist
James Woodforde.
Halsway Manor in
Halsway, is now used as England's National Centre for Traditional Music, Dance and Song. It is the only residential
folk centre in the UK. The eastern end of the building dates from the 15th century and the western end was a 19th century addition. The manor, which is mentioned in the
Domesday Book, was at one time used by
Cardinal Beaufort as a hunting lodge and thereafter as a family home until the mid-1960s when it became the folk music centre. It has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II* listed building.
Halswell House in
Goathurst has Tudor origins but was purchased by the Tynte family and rebuilt in 1689. including the
Temple of Harmony, which stands in Mill Wood and has now been fully restored.
Further Information
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