button to main menu  Clarke's Survey of the Lakes, 1787

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Page 10:-
mound of loose, detached stones (none of them of any great size) containing an area or circus of 90 yards in diameter: the rampart is about 5 yards high, and its external bound comprehends about five acres. In that part which fronts the East is an entrance about 20 yards wide; and near the centre stands a single stone of prodigious magnitude, being upwards of 12 feet high. Some years ago, there were four other stones, though not so large as this which remains; of these, two were placed like door-posts at the entrance, and two in the amphitheatre. These smaller stones were blasted and removed by order of a person who appears to have been at that time the farmer of this place: one of the men employed in the work having hanged himself, and the other turning lunatic, has given a fair opening for vulgar superstition, to impute those misfortunes to their sacrilege in defacing what they suppose was formerly a place of eminent sanctity.
The origin and design of this singular structure are so uncertain, that nothing more than mere conjecture can possibly be adduced concerning them; it is, according to some, a temple of the Druids, according to others it is a fortress: It may be "the circle of the terrible Loda, with the massy stone of his power," (so often named in those sublime, pathetic, and unequalled poems ascribed to Ossian;) it may, in short, be whatever learning guided by fancy can dictate.
Among the rest, permit me to lay a conjecture before my readers. The famous Round Table is universally acknowledged to be the scene where the brave of other days vindicated their knighthood by feats of arms. May not this is some measure prove a key to this my serious structure? Their vicinity argues for it, and nothing makes against the idea that this is the Gymnasium where the wrestlers, the racers, and others, not of the degree of knights, performed their exercises; exercises not yet forgotten among the plain, uncultivated mountaineers of this country.
That it has been no place of worship belonging to the Druids I think very evident: we no where learn that they had either temple or altar. They prophesied, it is said, from the intrails of human victims laid upon stones; but they resided, they worshipped, they taught their pupils in the woods. Their principal seat was in the Isle of Anglisea among the oaks *, whence they had their name; and their chief festival was on the first day of the vernal new moon, when they went with great solemnity to gather the sacred misseltoe, to which they attributed many miraculous effects.
A farther and stronger argument of Mayburgh having been built about the same time with the Round Table, is drawn from a very well-known piece of history. The knights of King Arthur, the Teutonics, Hospitallers, and Templars, (who were nearly the same,) having built Marienburgh in Prussia, (which differs little in sound from Mayburgh, and had its name from a large oak which stood there,) were afterwards banished Germany; many of them then came into England, where considerable possessions were allotted them. That these domains were in this neighbourhood the name and privileges of Temple-Sowerby plainly evince, as it enjoys to this day the immunities of these knights, viz. exemption from land-tax and all tolls in every market, and freedom from the jurisdiction of the Bishop; the Lord thereof acting both as Bishop and Chancellor in his own Lordship.
Before we dismiss the subject, I cannot help remarking that the great Countess of Pembroke is totally silent respecting Mayburgh, notwithstanding it was her own property; and Sir Philip Sydney, whose intelligence was very great, resided with her at Brougham Castle during the time he wrote part of his Arcadia.
Dr. Burn and some others say, that Penrith Castle was built of the stones which were
taken
* Deru in the British, and [illegible Greek] in Greek, signifies an Oak.
gazetteer links
button -- "Mayburgh" -- Mayburgh
button -- "Mayburgh" -- (Mayburgh, Yanwath etc (CL13inc)2)
button -- "Penrith Castle" -- (Penrith Castle, Penrith (CL13inc)2)
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