Carved hills

Avebury SE weekend 035

White Horse of Uffington

One of the most striking things you can see as you drive through the English countryside is the great white shape of a hill figure cut into the landscape. There are many to see, at least fifty known figures, ranging from the very recent to the ancient. Some are famous the world over, like the White Horse at Uffington that dates back the best part of 3,000 years. Others are less well known, even in England.

Marlborough White Horse

Marlborough White Horse

Thousands of people must daily drive past the Whiteleaf Cross and never notice it. A large triangular base surmounted these days by a cross, cut into the chalk of a wooded hillside. The earliest known reference to the figure dates back only to 1742, but it shares the hillside with a far earlier Iron Age hillfort and barrows. Was there once a more ancient figure, later Christianised for ‘decency’?

Cerne Abbas B (1)

Cerne Abbas Giant

Certainly, puritanical morality would have been offended by the Cerne Abbas Giant, whose erect phallus has been a symbol of fertility for centuries at least… the jury is out on his age and he is dated variously from 17thC to ancient history. The Giant stands some 180ft tall and has entered into the folk history of the area with a depth and scope that, to my mind, can only serve to confirm his antiquity, as does the name of the village, Cerne Abbas, named for Cernunnos, the Horned God.

Whipsnade Lion

Whipsnade Lion

There are still a good many I have not seen and there are many whose existence is now only half a memory in forgotten journals and research, or speculative, like the Gogmagog giants of T.C. Lethbridge. Most of the ones that remain are less than a few hundred years old. Some are very recent and include regimental badges and figures marking some major event or place… like the great lion of Whipsnade.

Cherhill White Horse

Cherhill White Horse

Yet others retain more than a little mystery. The great figures must be scoured every few years to keep them visible. Many are cut into the chalk itself, others have their outlines filled with compacted chalk. The grass encroaches and the figures fade unless they are maintained. Each scouring and recutting inevitably alters the original shape, either a little and by accident, or a lot and by design. It is known that several existing figures have been changed… records exist showing sketches or describing details no longer extant; modern archaeological investigation can find traces long hidden from view. So can a good dowser.

Uffington White Horse from Dragon Hill

Uffington White Horse from Dragon Hill

So it begs the question of how old some of these figures really are. There may be records dating back to, say, the 17thC that describe a monument… but just because the record doesn’t exist prior to that date, does it necessarily mean the figure was not there? Or was it just so much a part of the landscape that no-one thought to mention it? Beneath some of the centuries-old horses and figures, what lies forgotten? Is what we see today but a pale shadow of a former geoglyph that spoke of the dreams, lands and gods of our ancestors? And what lies hidden, lost now beneath our grassy hillsides, farmlands and timber plantations?

The top of Whiteleaf Cross in need of scouring

The top of Whiteleaf Cross in need of scouring

On our travels we have noticed a distinct feel to the landscapes in which the older figures are carved… a particular formation of hills and slopes where it feels as if there ‘should’ have been a figure. Very scientific, of course… going on instinct. Yet I remember we looked at one set of hills and earmarked it as a ‘should have’. Quite apart from the hillside itself, the ancient Ridgeway, Grim’s Dyke and the Icknield way converge on the spot… and researching this article, I found we were not the only ones to have thought so; the parish land records speak of fields named for such a figure, and a lane was named for it, though the figure is now lost to memory and description and no longer graces the hills. There is history beneath our every footstep, even though it can no longer be seen.

"Long Man of Wilmington" by Cupcakekid at en.wikipedia. Licensed under CC BY 2.5 via Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Long_Man_of_Wilmington.jpg#/media/File:Long_Man_of_Wilmington.jpg

“Long Man of Wilmington” by Cupcakekid at en.wikipedia. Licensed under CC BY 2.5

About Sue Vincent

Sue Vincent was a Yorkshire born writer, esoteric teacher and a Director of The Silent Eye. She was immersed in the Mysteries all her life. Sue maintained a popular blog and is co-author of The Mystical Hexagram with Dr G.M.Vasey. Sue lived in Buckinghamshire, having been stranded there due to an accident with a blindfold, a pin and a map. She had a lasting love-affair with the landscape of Albion, the hidden country of the heart. Sue  passed into spirit at the end of March 2021.
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22 Responses to Carved hills

  1. Sadje says:

    This is the first time I’ve read of these figures. Very interesting and intriguing phenomenon.

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  2. willowdot21 says:

    An interesting post so, I love the thought of history beneath our footsteps. I am so glad that you are back on my radar! 😁

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  3. Dave says:

    Fantastic post! I live very near to the White Horse in Westbury 😀

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  4. I’ve always found these figures fascinating. Another great post, Sue xx

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  5. V.M.Sang says:

    I live near to the Long Man, although he is in need of scouring at the moment. I also read about the archeological dig that found the Gog and Magog figures on the GogMagog hills south of Cambridge, that you mention. At the time, I lived near there. Sadly, they were allowed to grow over and have been obscured once more. I understand there is a carving, scratched in Sawston Church by someone, depicting them.
    Walking, a few years ago, near East Dene in Sussex, my husband and I were surprised to see a horse carved in a hillside. It can only be seen from this one path, I think, and is not, unlike the Long Man, near a road.
    As you say, we don’t know what is beneath our feet when we walk in the countryside.

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    • Sue Vincent says:

      One of these days I will get to the Long Man. I am pretty sure I saw it as a child, but cannot be certain I am not fabricating the memory, knowing it so well from research.
      I hadn’t heard about the carving at Sawston… I may have to look into that, Viv. Thank you 🙂

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  6. carolinescott1800 says:

    Amazing…

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  7. Enjoyed that – thank you.

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  8. Adele Marie says:

    Perhaps these carvings might serve the same purpose as the Nazca Lines, and lol, I know that mystery hasn’t been solved yet either. The great forgetting is coming to an end, I believe that and we will remember why and where. xxx

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  9. Darlene says:

    These are fascinating. I believe there is one in Yorkshire that hubby pointed out to me on one of our first visits.

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