Posted on 05/12/2007 10:43:08 AM PDT by blam
Ah yes. Wodenes Dyke.
"In its most perfect state it began at Andover, in Hampshire, ran through the counties of Berkshire, Wiltshire, and Somersetshire, and terminated in the Severn Sea or Bristol Channel. It was called Wodenes Dyke by the Saxons, contracted into Wondes-dyke, and corrupted to Wans-dyke, as Wodenes-daeg is into Wednes-day."
Ah found ma thrill, on Silbury Hilllll.... Sing it Fats!
They needed a plateau to hang-glide from.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba49/ba49news.html#inbrief
Dyke redated
Wat’s Dyke,a 40 mile earthwork which runs parallel to Offa’s Dyke in the Welsh Marches, has been dated to the 5th century. The dyke was assumed to be a near-contemporary predecessor of Offa’s Dyke, built by the 8th century Mercian king. But excavations at Maes-y-Clawdd near Oswestry by Shropshire’s archaeological service have uncovered a small fire site, eroded shards of Romano-British pottery and quantities of charcoal, radiocarbon dated to between AD411-561. The discovery appears to link the dyke with the post-Roman kingdom which centred on Wroxeter.
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Just updating the GGG info, not sending a general distribution. |
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