Reading Out Loud
Focused Elements:
You can have these explanations read out loud by clicking on 'Speak Explanation' (access key 'a')
These controls are to provide alternative means of accessing the information on this page. Two main facilities are provided: adjusting the text size and listening to the text on the page.
1) Adjusting Text Size:
You can increase the text size by clicking on 'Larger' (access key '+'), and reduce it by clicking on 'Smaller' (access key '-'). You can reset the size back to its original value by clicking on 'Reset' (access key 'j')
2) Listening to the Text
You can adjust the pitch of the spoken word, the rate or speed of delivery and the volume. You can also choose the voice to use by clicking on the drop-down list. The default voice is whatever is the standard for the computer and browser you are using.
To set your default, please refer to the description in the Accessibility Statement.
There are normally three sections of text on the page that you can listen to: the headings, the main text and a selection. Click on 'Speak Headings to speak the page headings (access key 'l'). Click on 'Speak Main Text' (access key 'q') to listen to the main text.
You can also select an area of text in the page using standard select methods and click on 'Speak Selection' (access key 'w') to read the selection aloud.
You can enable the reading out loud of the element that currently has focus by clicking on 'Start Focus Speaking' (access key 'f') and you can stop this by clicking on 'Stop Focus Speaking' (access key 'd').
You can pause the audio by clicking on 'Pause' (access key 'r') and resume by clicking on 'Resume' (access key 't').
To cancel or stop the audio click on 'Cancel' (access key 'y'). To restart the current audio from the beginning, click on 'Restart' (access key 'k').
To hide the accessibility controls click on 'Hide Panel' (access key 'h')
To hide this explanation click on 'Hide Explanation' (access key 'x')
Widecombe-in-the-Moor
Widecombe's Ancient Landscape


Widecombe's Ancient Landscape
A book of 171 pages with 95 illustrations in full colour
Written by Roger Claxton
The perfect companion for exploring Widecombe village, the valley and the surrounding moorland
All sales profits are donated to local causes
Local collection also available to avoid postage
Kindle and Amazon hardback and paperback editions are also available
ISBN (Amazon hardback) 979-8852985002
ISBN (Amazon paperback) 979-8397281980
Additional supporting material for the book, including a number of interactive Google maps, is available from: www.mymusings.co.uk
To Order Your Own Copy of the Book:
To order a copy of the book to be sent to you by post at the direct online price of £11.00 plus postage and packaging, or to collect locally to Widecombe, please choose your option from the list on the right and then click on the 'Add to Cart' button. This will take you securely to PayPal to complete your card purchase. YOU DO NOT NEED A PAYPAL ACCOUNT TO MAKE A SECURE PAYMENT. However, please make sure we have your correct email and mailing addresses as recorded within PayPal, or by contacting us. Thank you for your purchase.
For the local (Widecombe) pick-up option, we will arrange with you when and where to collect your book. Sensibly, the postal option is only for UK purchasers. For other marketplaces, it is cheaper to use Amazon.
Postage Options: We are only shipping this book within the UK. Please buy from Amazon (see below) for other marketplaces.
You can securely view your PayPal cart by clicking here:
If you would prefer to pay by another method, such as a cheque, bank transfer, or in person:
Please Contact Us
If you would like to purchase an Amazon version of this book you can use the links on the right.
The book is available digitally in a Kindle, Amazon hardback and Amazon paperback editions in most Amazon territories.
For other Amazon users, please go to your normal Amazon web page and search for 'B0C9SBXM1J' or the book title.
To avoid delays please be sure to choose the correct postage option, or if you choose local pick-up, that you do live within easy reach of Widecombe!!
Synopsis
This book is about the landscape around Widecombe-in-the-Moor, a village in Dartmoor, Devon, UK. The focus is mostly on the immediate area around Widecombe village, and encompasses the hills and moorland as well as the valley in which the village sits, but also includes parts of the wider parish. This is an ancient landscape, as evidenced by the many archaeological features still present, which can easily be spotted just by walking around. Many of the buildings that can be seen today also bear evidence to this earlier time. This is not a comprehensive study, but picks out specific aspects of Widecombe’s history, either areas that have not been addressed before, or where a new perspective is shown on existing familiar history. As a result, the reader should discover some new and, hopefully, surprising, and interesting Widecombe related topics. The book should help the reader to understand the multi-faceted richness of what is a relatively small part of the moor, feeding the spirit with the rugged beauty, the peace, the skies that often race by and bring rapidly changing weather, and the relatively ‘unspoilt’ nature of the landscape even though it has been moulded by the actions of humans over recent millennia. It is also intended to help the reader enjoy the parish landscape either whilst out and about, or from the comfort of an armchair. It adds further richness to an already rich landscape, and thus hopefully makes a visit or a mental image that much more enjoyable. Some of the interpretations made in this book are necessarily conjectural and personal. The reader is encouraged to make up their own mind about what they see, and to just enjoy being in this unique part of the world.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Early History
- Part One: The Valley Landscape
- The Slope
- Reaves
- Hut-Circles
- Abandoned Field Systems
- Ridge and Furrow
- Lines of Stones
- Boulder Incisions
- The ‘D’ Stone and Other Boundary Markers
- Valley Field Systems
- Moor Gates & Gate Posts
- Driftways
- Granite
- Large Granite Slab
- Water
- Tin
- Wildlife
- Valley Flora
- Gorse
- Meadows
- Marsh
- Hedgerows
- Part Two: Settlement
- Introduction
- Domesday
- Medieval Widecombe
- Some more on the origins of Widecombe
- Box 8: Widecombe Origins
- 1198-1201 - The Pipe Roll
- 1244 - The Devon Eyre
- 1244 - Testa de Nevil
- Some Further Early Documents & Names
- Early Religion
- Ownership Patterns
- Widecombe Manors
- Dunstone
- The Manor
- Dunstone Cross and Green
- Part Three: A Pre-Conquest Document
- Epilogue
- Acknowledgements
- Bibliography
- Some Internet Resources
- Index
Acknowledgments
Thanks are due to the archive of the Dean and Chapter of Exeter Cathedral for granting permission to use images, and for photographing the Peadington document, the South West Heritage Trust for their similar help with the documents in their care and the National Archives for permission to use the images of the 1201 Exchequer Pipe Roll and the 1244 Devon Eyre.
I am also indebted to David Stone and Richard Sandover for their work on the Moor Medieval project which looked at the origins of Widecombe, and which provided me with a starting point for the investigations in Part 2.
I would also like to thank Dr John Booker for his translations of the various Medieval Latin texts, Alex Richards, Dartmoor National Park Authority’s Historic Environment Record Officer for her invaluable help with the HER and LiDAR data and mapping and Andy Crabb of the Dartmoor National Park Authority Archaeology Department for his help with the archaeological features on Dunstone Down.
Thanks are also due to my wife, Ann, who provided valuable feedback on versions of the text, Tim Whitten and David Ashman for their valued comments, and to those who granted permission to use images, especially Peter Rennells for his map of the valley, used as a frontispiece to help people find their way around the places mentioned in the text.
The information on this page was last modified on February 25 2024 13:51:58.