Menu
 
Portfolio
 
Terms of Use
 

Wayland’s Smithy

Wayland’s Smithy is a chambered long barrow located near the village of Ashbury in the south-eastern English county of Oxfordshire. Probably constructed in the thirty-sixth century BC, during Britain’s Early Neolithic period, today it survives in a partially reconstructed state.

 

Wayland’s Smithy is along the same hill as the Uffington White Horse and Uffington Castle, while it is also close to The Ridgeway, an ancient road running along the Berkshire Downs. In the early middle ages, the site became associated with the mythological figure Wayland the Smith, from which it gained its name.

 

The name “Wayland’s Smithy” is a reference to the mythological metal-worker Wayland the Smith. This character appears in Norse mythology, and a depiction of him is believed to be present on the Franks Casket, on display in the British Museum in London. The monument’s name is first recorded in an early medieval land charter from Compton Beauchamp, which has been attributed date of 955 AD.

 

In 1738, Francis Wise, who was then the under-keeper of the Bodleian Library, recorded a belief held about the site in local folklore. Like several other early commentators, Wise referred to the site not as “Wayland’s Smithy”, but only as “Wayland Smith”. Wise related that:

 

“All the account which the country people are able to give of it is ‘At this place lived formerly an invisible Smith, and if a traveler’s Horse had lost a Shoe upon the road, he had no more to do than to bring the Horse to this place with a piece of money and leaving both there for some little time, he might come again and find the money gone, but the Horse new shod”

 

More posts..

Barnard Castle

Barnard Castle is a ruined medieval castle situated in the town of the same name in County Durham. A stone castle was built on the site of an earlier defended position from around 1095 to 1125 by Guy de Balliol. Between 1125 and 1185 his

Read More
The Rollright Stones

  The Rollright Stones is a complex of three Neolithic and Bronze Age megalithic monuments near the village of Long Compton, on the borders of Oxfordshire and Warwickshire. Constructed from local oolitic limestone, the three monuments now known as the King’s Men and the Whispering

Read More
St Lythans burial chamber

  St Lythans burial chamber is a single stone megalithic dolmen, built around 6,000 BP (before present) as part of a chambered long barrow, during the mid-Neolithic period. From the end of the last ice age (between 10,000 and 12,000 BP), Mesolithic hunter-gatherers from Central

Read More
Staffordshire Hoard

  The Staffordshire Hoard is the largest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver metalwork yet found. It consists of over 3,500 items.   The hoard was most likely deposited in the 7th century and contains artifacts probably manufactured during the 6th and 7th centuries. It

Read More
Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on pinterest
error: