Showing posts with label roman road. Show all posts
Showing posts with label roman road. Show all posts
Tuesday, 28 January 2014
Roman Roads and Windfarms
Those of you interested in the debate around local windfarm development and the potential impact upon archaeological and historic monuments should take a few moments to read this tremendous piece of research from local historians Louie Pastore and Stephen Jennings.
No one would deny that we need to seek new sources of energy - as we've said before, there are many excellent examples across Scotland of local communities coming together to ensure community ownership and control of such developments, generating sustainable income for themselves while creating jobs. certainly not going to argue with that (though that isn't exactly the model that's being proposed locally...) However, whether we need to site windfarms in areas of historical significance is a different debate...
Read the report here...
Monday, 30 December 2013
Tales of the Oak - Our Year In Review
2013 has been a great year on the blog, we've had tens of thousands of visits, new writers, new friends and more folklore and stories than we've shared for a long time. Here's a wee stroll down memory lane, to our most (statistically) popular posts of the year...
As ever, John Donald's Old Greenock Characters remain a firm favourite - so I think folk will be pleased with one of the projects we have coming up next year, but stealing the show, beating out even the legendary Tommy Matches, was our trip to The Winter Fair...
Concern around the proposed windfarm development On Lurg Moor actually ensured lots more people discovered our local Roman heritage. Hats off to the group who continue to campaign - we have a few pieces from them coming in the new year.
We enjoy posting fiction inspired by the area on here as well, and this year, it was the mysterious Captain Nemo's shipyard visit which edged ahead.
The introduction of Sir Glen Douglas Rhodes proved to be one of the most popular posts of the year, which maybe goes to show that people enjoy a good yarn as much as they enjoy historical facts and figures.
Our major projects this year were of course Wee Nasties and Tales of the Oak, both still available to read for free on Scribd / kindle / ipad. Most popular pages related to this project were our Wee Nasties "deleted scene" featuring the Catman, and an explanation of how Andy and myself have been creating the comic pages so far.
2013 has been a big year for folklore and heritage all round, from Richard III to abominable snowmen, here's IO9s rundown of the year in international historical discoveries...
A big thank you to everyone involved in our projects this year, from directly helping out, to simply downloading and sharing what we have done or supporting our projects by buying our ebooks. It's not all just for fun, we do have a mission, and it's to celebrate the history and heritage of this area in a different way - with imagination and magic. That can be a hard sell down our way, so we need your help for that.
There's new books, comics and stories for 2014, and we look forward to telling you all about them very soon...
Monday, 3 June 2013
Keep Corlic Wild
There's a new facebook page, Keep Corlic Wild, raising awareness of the plans for a 70 meter meterological mast which many believe will have a detrimental impact not only on the local landscape, but also local archaeology relating to local Roman sites. The mast will monitor conditions for a proposed wind farm. The page explains some of what has happened in other areas during wind farm construction and also explores the company ultimately behind the proposal.
A planning application has been lodged with Inverclyde Council, you have until this Friday, June 7th, to add your comments to this proposal.
Often, as we've seen before, objections to such plans and schemes are decried as getting in the road of "progress"...more accurately, "profit", still the basis of so much regeneration and sustainability planning, something even Unesco World Heritage Sites like Edinburgh Old City struggle against. Or it could be, that you feel wind farms are a fact of life we all have to accept, in the same way as the railway once was.
Torch are not directly involved with this particular Facebook campaign, but we certainly recognise its concerns.
For more on the archeology and Roman heritage of the area, you can read a survey produced by one of the members of the protest group based around Lurg Moor or read some of our own research.
Thursday, 25 April 2013
On Lurg Moor
Here at Magic Torch, we're fairly big fans of all the things the Romans did for us, and have over the years enjoyed exploring the sites associated with Roman's locally - even though we're folklorists, not archaeologists. We especially enjoyed a piece on the Roman Fortlet on Inverclyde TV recently. Here's an opportunity for you to enjoy some of the same terrain next Bank Holiday weekend, on a guided walk. Thanks to Evelina Longworth for this post...
We
invite you to join us for a walking tour commencing at 2.30 PM on Sunday 5th May
2013. Led by Stephen Jennings, it will show you the amazing and important
archaeological sites on the slopes around Corlic Hill and Lurg Moor just south
of Greenock and in our magnificent Clyde Muirshiel Regional Park.
We have
to restrict the number of people attending and you can book by contacting Nigel
Willis on WillisBigNig@aol.com. Bookings will be accepted on a first come first served
basis so book early! If you also say where you will travel from we can try to
arrange car sharing, if that is of
interest.
The area
of our walk was the place that the very first Greenockians lived and farmed and
includes iron age Celtic structures, cup marked stones, the Lurg Moor Roman
Fortlet and the Roman road, a rare intact and fully enclosed Iron Age Stone Hut
Circle Farm and is the location of abandoned 18th, 19th
and 20th Century farms with rig and furrow marks, walls and roads from various
periods.
Some of
these structures have been officially recorded but not all and Steve Jennings,
as a result of working there for over a year, has made new discoveries. This is
a great opportunity for you to reacquaint yourself or learn about this important
area for the first time. The following is an extract of Steve's paper Archaeology in the Hills Above Greenock.
"But the most essential feature of this area and what makes it truly unique is the very presence of a Roman fortlet amidst an Iron Age Scottish landscape with a density of population. The ScARF (Scottish Archaeological Research Framework) report makes this very clear, the “panel was set up to incorporate the study of the Roman impact on what is now Scotland and it is important to consider the relationship that Iron Age peoples of this zone had with Rome and the wider world”. Clearly in these hills resides the rare opportunity to find several answers with an importance not only on the regional and national stage but European wide as well. With one of the best preserved records of Iron Age life, Scotland, and in particular this area stretching from Lurg Moor to Corlick, is positioned to help fill out the history of the relationship Iron Age Celtic peoples had with the invaders of Rome from trade, assimilation, rejection to co-option. Though it must first be established if there indeed was contemporary overlap between the local people and Romans before we can discern the nature of their relationship with one another, this can only be done through more intensive methods than have hitherto been brought on the landscape and further cements its criticality in understanding the wider import of Roman Scotland. Any additional disturbance and development of the lands will gravely harm the ability to gain further understanding of this period in our history.
While the importance of these sites to a wider audience is beyond doubt it would be a mistake if one failed to contemplate local interest as well for these archaeological remains are what is left of the history from Kilmacolm through Greenock to Gourock and beyond. Indeed, far from the desolate and boggy terrain many see today, this vibrant landscape is the link to Inverclyde’s agricultural and Iron Age past. It is therefore imperative the region from Lurg Moor to Corlick receives the benefit of protection and further understanding that only a more rigorous review can provide. To disturb the archaeology, much worse destroy, could potentially be a loss to culture tragic in its scale"
Meeting place: the MOD mast, east of Whitelees
Cottage.
How
to get there:
Driving from Drumfrochar Rd / Cornhaddock St, Greenock
- Turn up Peat Rd, past
Drumfrochar Station onto the Old Largs Rd. Keep going on this road past Whinhill
Golf Club towards Loch Thom and take the first road to the left. The attached map shows where to park and then walk to the meeting point
beside the mast.
Driving from Largs or Clyde Muirshiel Regional Park's
Greenock Cut Visitor Centre - drive up the Old Largs Rd along the east side of Loch
Thom towards Greenock till you are clear of the dam. Carry on towards Greenock
and take the third road to the right. The attached map
shows where to park and then walk to the meeting point beside the
mast.
N.B. If you find you are beside Whinhill Golf course you
have gone too far. Turn round and follow instructions for finding it from
Greenock!
Length of walk: approx 1.75 to 2
hours.
Terrain covered: part road, part sheep track, part open moorland.
Moderate fitness required.
Footwear: boots or wellies if you prefer. Depending on weather,
some of the ground could be wet.
Things to bring other than suitable
clothing: Camera, binoculars (very helpful for looking at more
distant archaeological remains and the magnificent views, but not essential),
water and snack.
NO
DOGS ALLOWED - IT IS LAMBING
TIME
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