Page:VCH Cornwall 1.djvu/426

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

A HISTORY OF CORNWALL apparently showing that in some cases the Roman coins were placed in a kist with the urn deliberately. In that instance an urn full of ashes was found in the year 1702 in the parish of Towednack, under ' a prodigious rock' of moorstone ' supported by four pillars of the same,' and beside the urn a round ball of earth, and in this ball four-score silver coins of the late emperors, ' very fair and well preserved.' It is unfortunate that no measurements of this ' prodigious rock ' and the four pillars were kept, as the description would be applicable to a quoit 1 rather than to a kist vaen of the character usual in Cornwall. The distinction between the two is almost entirely a matter of size. While the kists are generally about 2 ft. or 3 ft. square, the tallest side stone in Trethevy quoit 2 is 9 ft. 8 in., and that at Zennor 3 is 8 ft. 7 in. ; while the covering stones vary from 8 ft. by 5ft. at Grugith * to i8ft. 6 in. by 13 ft. 6 in. at Lanyon. 6 But the shape of the quoit is in general that of a huge kist vaen having two, 6 three, 7 four, 8 or even six 9 side stones with one big covering stone resting on them. Those at Zennor, 10 Mulfra, 11 Lanyon, 13 and Carwynnen 13 have fallen at different times, and the two latter have been restored ; 14 but even in these cases it seems as though they had all been merely variations from the type represented by Trethevy 16 and Chyoon, 16 which latter the editor of Naenia Cornubiae rightly describes as the ' most perfect and compact ' in Cornwall." There is reason to believe that all the Cornish quoits, except perhaps Grugith, 18 which is unique in having only two supporting stones, were origin- ally surrounded, if not covered, by a mound, as some traces of such a structure are found in every instance, except at Carwynnen, where it must be remembered the whole structure fell, and has been restored. 1 The monuments usually described as ' cromlechs ' are always called ' quoits ' in Cornwall, where a cromlech or ' grumbler ' means a circle, and a tolmen a holed stone. 3 Joum. Roy. Inst. Corntv. (1850), 31 ; Trans. Penz. Nat. Hilt, and Antiq. Soc. (1850), 435 ; Borlase, Naen. Corn. 45 ; Lukis, Pre-hist. Stone Mon., 1 1, 13, pi. xxvii ; Lysons, Magna Brit, ccxix. 3 Borlase, Antiq. 231 ; Borlase, Naen. Corn. 51 ; Tram. Penz. Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Soc. i, 200 ; (1882-3), 203 ; Lukis, op. cit. IO, 28, pi. xxi ; Lysons, ccxix. 4 Borlase, Naen. Corn. 278 ; Lukis, op. cit. 10, 29, pi. xxiii. 5 Borlase, Antiq. 231 ; Lukis, op. cit. 8, 25, pi. xviii ; Trans. Penz. Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Soc. i, 197; Lysons, Magna Brit, ccxix. 6 Grugith, Borlase, Naen, Corn. 278 ; Lukis, op. cit. 10, 29. ' Lanyon, Borlase, Antiq. 231 ; Trans. Penz. Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Soc. i, 197 ; Carwynnen, Borlasa, Naen. Corn. 25 ; Lukis, op. cit. 1 1, 29, pi. xxiv ; Lysons, ccxix. s Chyoon, Borlase, Naen. Cam. 55 ; Trans. Penz. Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Soc. i, 198 ; Borlase, Antiq. 227 ; Lukis, op. cit. 9, 24, pi. xx ; Lysons, op. cit. ccxix, and pi. 9 Zennor, supra note (3) ; Trethevy, supra note (2). 10 Borlase, Antiq. 231 ; Boilase, Naen. Corn. 51 ; Trans. Penz. Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Soc. i, 200; (1882-3), 203 ; Lukis, Pre-hist. Stone Mon. 10, 28, pi. xxi ; Lysons, op. cit. ccxix. " Borlase, Antiq. 230 ; Trans. Penz. Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Soc. i, 198 ; Borlase, Naen. Corn. 59 ; Lukis, op. cit. 9, 28, pi. xix ; Lysons, op. cit., ccxix. " Borlase, Antiq. 231 ; Lukis, Pre-hist. Stont Mon. 8, 25, pi. xviii ; Trans. Penz. Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Soc. i, 197 ; Lysons, Magna Brit, ccxix. 13 Borlase, Naen. Corn. 25. 14 Lanyon fell in 1815, and was re-erected in 1824. Dr. Borlase says (Antiq. 231) in 1759 ' l was so n 'gh that a man could sit on horseback under it ; it is now 5 ft. 8 in. in height. 15 Journ. Roy. Inst. Cornw. (1850), 31 ; Trans. Penz. Nat. Hist, and Antiq. Sot. (1850), 435 ; Borlase, Naen. Corn. 45 ; Lukis, Pre-bist. Stone Mon. n, 13, pi. xxvii ; Lysons, Magna Brit, ccxix. la Borlase, Naen. Corn. 55. 17 The specimen which gave the name to the townplace of Quoit, on the Goss Moors in St. Columb Major, appears to have been very much like that at Chyoon, but perhaps larger. It fell, and the stones were broken up and removed before 1871 ; Borlase, Naen. Corn. 62. 18 Borlase, Naen. Corn. 278 ; Lukis, Pre-hist. Stone Mon. 10, 29, pi. xxiu. 364