Ancient trackway
Ancient trackway can refer to any track or trail whose origin is lost in antiquity. Such paths existed from the earliest times and in every part of the globe. The term is commonly used in the British isles to describe the
ancient trackways that already existed when the
Romans arrived, in Britain. Such trackways, were often built on by the Romans and form the foundations of some of the current system of roads.
The
Concise Oxford Dictionary gives the definition of "trackway" as "a path formed by the repeated treading of people or animals". The very earliest creatures to arrive in Britain after the
Ice Age, crossing land which would later be the English Channel, were grazing animals following the spreading vegetation. Their predators, including humans â€" the
Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) hunter-gatherers - followed. The earlier Mesolithic people were nomadic but in the later part of the Mesolithic permanent settlements started to appear.
These settlements were connected with each other by the ancient trackways. These
green ways often followed natural contours in the landscape, and had evolved over time as animals were driven from place to place, and pedestrians walked to and from neighbouring settlements. Much of the land was forested; the lower valleys provided fertile land and were ideal places for fishing, agriculture and the rearing of cattle.
The trackways will have provided links in many ways: farmsteads to fields; to other farmsteads; to the neighbouring long barrow tomb; with long-distance trackways joining the separate localities to the camp meeting places and cross-country flint roads. Others were more likely to have been processional ways, like one heading for the gigantic temple at
Avebury. Others, the long-distance ways mentioned above, are now known as the
Icknield Way, the
Ridgeway National Trail, the
Harrow Way and the
Pilgrims' Way.
Some of these trackways followed the tops of higher land, whilst others progressed along the lower slopes. The lowland areas were thickly forested and poorly drained and for long dstance travel there was an advantage in following the top of a line of hills. Skills to develop tracks across bog lands, such as in Somerset, were learnt by early people. Known as
corduroy roads, they were formed when huge quantities of alder poles and brushwood were used to link the fen islands across the marshes. The
Sweet track in the
Glastonbury fens ,
Somerset is the oldest purpose built road in the world and has been dated to the
3800s BC.
On occasion, where rivers caused an obstacle to progress, bridges were built across them, and several roads met to use the bridge. Here major settlements grew, providing sustenance to travellers and their animals using the trackways. There are many good example of this: three follow.
Wallingford
The original settlement at
Wallingford in
Oxfordshire dates back to the dawn of British history, when its founders showed a remarkable amount of discrimination in choosing its site. Nestling in a fertile valley on the banks of the
River Thames, it was an ideal place for fishing, agriculture and the rearing of cattle. The ancient trackways, in particular the Icknield Way, gave it lines of communication converging on its ford. The remains of the ramparts, which still surround the town, are the successors of the rudimentary fortifications of the old British settlement, were adapted in turn by Roman, Saxon and Norman conquerors.
Brownhills
A similar site is
Brownhills once in
Staffordshire, now in
West Midlands. Brownhills was a meeting point for ancient roads and trackways since prehistoric times. It is thought that the
Watling Street was in use before the Romans came, ands what were later called the Chester Road and Coventry Road are also thought to have been ancient trackways.
Cadbury Castle and South Cadbury Village
Cadbury Castle in
Somerset is a tremendous iron age camp covering some 18 acres (73,000 m²), one of the most impressive sites in Britain. It is the focal point of many ancient trackways and is guarded by four huge banks with a height in places of over 40 feet (12 m) from the bottom of the ditch.
*
Icknield Way Over 100 miles (160 km) from
Buckinghamshire to
Norfolk*
Ridgeway National Trail,
*
Pilgrims' Way.
*
Ley lines - The proposition was made, by
Alfred Watkins after
World War I, that these trackways are associated to ley lines. [
1].