Dipping Stone (Whaley Moor): Difference between revisions

From International Robin Hood Bibliography
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* {{:Biden, H B 1885a}}; not seen
* {{:Biden, H B 1885a}}; not seen
* {{:Cox, John Charles 1904a}}; see p. 57
* {{:Cox, John Charles 1904a}}; see p. 57
* {{:Green, Charles 1944a}}; not seen
* [https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1009292 Historic England: Wayside and boundary cross known as The Dipping Stone]
* [https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1009292 Historic England: Wayside and boundary cross known as The Dipping Stone]
* [https://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=13173 Megalithic Portal: The Dipping Stone – Ancient Cross in England in Derbyshire]
* [https://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=13173 Megalithic Portal: The Dipping Stone – Ancient Cross in England in Derbyshire]

Revision as of 05:14, 21 February 2019

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The Dipping Stone, Whaley Moor.

[[File:|thumb|right|500px|The Dipping Stone / Graham Hogg, 22 Sep. 2015, Creative Commons via Geograph.]]

By Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2019-02-21. Revised by Henrik Thiil Nielsen, 2019-02-21.

In the early 19th century, there was a tradition in the High Peak to the effect that Robin Hood had shot an arrow from the Bowstones near Lyme Handley to the Dipping Stone at Whaley Moor, and from there to Chinley Churn.

Wiliam Marriott discusses these traditions at length in his Antiquities of Lyme and its Vicinity, published in 1810 (see Allusions below). He notes that the folk names of 'Robin Hood's Picking Stone' and 'Robin Hood's Stone' were used of several stone monuments, but it is not entirely clear if the Dipping Stone was one of these.

Situated on the crest of a shallow ridge below the southern end of Whaley Moor, just off a footpath leading from Whaley Lane to Hawkshurt Head, the Dipping Stone is the rectangular, c. 120 cm long and c. 50 to 80 cm wide base stone of a pair of Saxon crosses, dated no later than the 10th century. Similar base stones are part of the Bowstones, Robin Hood's Picking Rods and the Great Stone at Stretford (Lancs). This group of crosses may have been boundary marks of either ecclesiastical divisions or English and Danish Districts. The Dipping Stone is a scheduled monument.[1] Template:PnItemQry

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