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oak tree, Wragmire Moss
site name:-   Inglewood Forest
locality:-   Wragmire Moss
locality:-   Wragmire
civil parish:-   St Cuthbert Without (formerly Cumberland)
civil parish:-   Hesket (formerly Cumberland)
county:-   Cumbria
locality type:-   tree
locality type:-   oak
coordinates:-   NY45174906 (unsupported guess) 
1Km square:-   NY4549
10Km square:-   NY44

hearsay:-  
Noted for 6 centuries, standing on the boundary between the manors of the Duke of Devonshire and of the Dean and Chapter of Carlisle, the parish boundary of St Cuthbert and Hesket parishes. It fell 13 June 1823.

hearsay:-  
John Withrington notes that it has been suggested that this is the 'trestle tree' in The Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnell: Arthur is hunting in Inglewood Forest:-
"The king was set at his trestle-tree / With his bow to slay the wild venery, ..."
But there seems insufficient evidence to back this suggestion. The Ballad of Adam Bell published London, 1536, also mentions a tree in Inglewood: William Cloudesly, outlawed for hunting deer, at some time returns to the forest with his wife:-
"Whan they come to Inglyswode, / Under theyr tryst-tre, /..."

Withrington, John: 1991: Wedding of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragenll: Lancaster University

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