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

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page xxxiii:-
neighbourhood; and as a detail of very many particulars will be inserted in the account which accompanies the Plans, shall just subjoin the reason why a great number of such relicks may be expected, and do really exist in these parts; and indeed, amidst the veneration excited by such objects, we are apt enough to be curious with respect to the cause that produced them: however, as such an account can only be a very brief recital of general transactions, I hope I shall be excused, if, not attempting any thing particularly calculated for the learned Antiquarian, I recite a few things that may possibly not be unacceptable to a beginner in the study of past ages.
We find Cumberland mentioned as being a distinct kingdom so late as the year 946; and long after that, it had Kings of its own who were almost independent. The tomb of its last King Dunmail is yet to be seen on the confines of Lancashire, on the road that leads from the Vale of St John's, at a place which is called Dunmail-Rays. It appears from the materials of this tomb, which is nothing but a large heap of stones, that the ancient rude, and (if I may be allowed the expression) druidical rites of sepulture, were still in vogue; or at least, that those of christianity had not yet taken place. The prodigious tract of country over which the first Bishops of Lendisfarn presided, and the annual circuits which they made for the purposes of conversion, add to the truth of this observation. History indeed, always says, that Cumberland was brought into subjection by the Saxons later than any other part of England; and this will account for the many British relicks to be found there. The Britons might, it is true, be Christians before the arrival of the Saxons, but the monument of King Dunmail shews that they had not, even long after that, adopted the practice in general of what we call Christian Burial: from thence we may infer with respect to other things, and indeed easily bring manifold authorities to support the various circumstances arising from such an inference, independent of that solitude, and that wildness, which, as they obstruct commerce, prevent innovation. I shall but instance one: Everard, Abbot of Holm-Cultreyn, who lived in the reign of Henry II. tells us, that the name of Thorsby is from a temple which the Pagans had there; and that a place near it called Carthew, (at present Cardew) signifies the Fen of God. I might mention also, that the village Kirkby-Thor in Westmoreland reminds one of the same barbarous God that Thorsby does; and they both, along with many more, indicate a long and tenacious remembrance of former prejudices. Nor do such places seem to have been afterwards, probably from their situation, favourable to regular institutions of a religious kind: the church of Bewcastle (which was indeed exposed to enemies in a particular manner) had in the days of Edward I. an income of L.19 per annum, in those of Henry VIII. of L.2. and in the time of war, Nothing.
With respect to Roman antiquities I need only observe, that two thirds of the stationary forces which they maintained in Britain were, according to the best historians, employed on the Borders; where the Romans themselves relate, that their soldiers carried on a business literally the same as moss-trooping with the barbarians. Their double rampart was afterwards built; and then the Barbarians passed the Solway in their carrochs, finding there an unprotected coast, and an opportunity of renewing their ravages; this obliged the defenders to double their vigilance, and increase the number of their posts in that quarter. We find mention of the great Stilicho himself having his camp at Elne-Foot, on that same coast, for the purpose of watching the motions of so restless an enemy; and the vestiges of such a camp, together with inscriptions on stones found in certain parts of it, are yet to be seen. The Romans have, in consequence of such circumstances, left many marks of the attention which they paid to the Western boundary of their empire; the remains of their encampments, their roads, their rampire, and their religion, are many, and some of their fortresses are not yet altogether in ruins.
I know of nothing in particular with respect to the Saxons in these parts: the names of towns in Saxon terminations are pretty much the same as in other counties of England; only that of Barrow is, perhaps owing to the nature of the country, more frequent than elsewhere. The conical tumuli are also very common; but as I know not
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