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One mile to the north of Ambleside is the hamlet of Rydal, best known as the home of the poet William Wordsworth who lived at Rydal Mount with his family from 1813 till his death in 1850. The valley stretching away behind Rydal Mount has a history much older than that of the poet, as from about the 13th century it was a deer park used by the Norman rulers for sport. Deer parks were not uncommon in Lakeland at this time; huge tracts of land being designated as Deer Parks and the rights of the inhabitants within them handed down for generations were severely curtailed. One of the many other Deer Parks dating from this time was at Troutbeck where about two thousand acres were enclosed in the upper part of the valley. Rydal first appears in the records in a document dated 3rd May 1277, which tells of a dispute between Sir Roger de Lancaster, lord of the Baronery of Kendal, and William de Lyndesey. The animals of William’s tenants at Ambleside had strayed into Sir Roger’s hunting preserve at Rydal. A fine was imposed of a half penny for every ox, cow, mare, pig or five sheep caught in the deer park. A higher rate of one penny was charged for every five goats which probably meant that they created the most damage when let loose in woodland. The park was much more afforested than today but the most interesting item in this medieval dispute is that the two litigants agreed to build a fence around the deer preserve-to define it as a park. William de Lyndsey promised to make a fence along the spur between Rydal Beck and Scandal, from the outskirts of Ambleside to Low Pike at a height of almost 1700 feet. Roger de Lancaster made a similar boundary along the western spur that divides Rydal Beck from Grasmere. The work was done in one summer between May and September 1277. We know this because the medieval court decided that “juries of respectable men were to fix the boundaries” and all fences were to be made before Michaelmass 1277. As you follow the steep track today from Rydal to the summit of Fairfield you can still see traces of this piece of landscape history. On the climb to Heron Pike at about 2000 feet, a line of grey, gale-flattened stone winds its way across the landscape. The work of 1277 where the track of the medieval deer park’s boundary passes from rock to boulder clay and peat bog the fence becomes a faint overgrown embankment scarcely a foot in height with a parallel ditch. The
Deer
Park
Today Beside the ditch and embankment referred to above, a ruined wall climbs the slope of the Rydal end of Nab Scar which it is claimed is the boundary wall (The Lake District, R.Millward and A. Robinson, 1970), but I am unsure of the date of construction, or the date when stone walling began in the Lakes. Today there are still names easily associated with Sir Roger’s Park. Hart Crag on the Scandal side of the valley being the most obvious. It is easy to imagine the tenants of the hamlet standing on the ridge to drive the deer back into the park as part of the “boon “ system imposed by their Norman masters. Other locations with a probable link are Buckstones Jump where the ricer falls down a rock step, and a piece of fellside nearby called Buckstones. In the next valley Little Hart Crag follows this association. A farm almost at the top of what would have been the old township of Rydal is called Hart Head Farm although the first mention in the record is in the late 1500s but the farm site may be much older. Another place name of some interest is Swine Crag, although the origin of the name is lost but may well allude to the pasturing of animals by the tenants. Sir William and his successors, who did not live in the vicinity of Rydal, hunted extensively in the Lakes, using for certain the path over from Brothers Water and down into Scandale, known by some (certainly in our house) as the Hunter’s Path. He probably stayed at a hunting lodge about half a mile out of Ambleside on top of a rocky knoll beside the cricket field. This was probably originally a crude “Pele Tower” construction (as yet unexcavated), which subsequently became the first Rydal Hall and remained so until 1576 when it was moved across the fields to its present position and the original hall fell into disrepair. The cricket pitch now overlays the orchard and part of the wall, which may have apparently surrounded the moat, remains as do the foundations of the fish tanks in the adjacent field. To the northwest are the River Rothay and its famous “stepping stones” crossing point, so beloved of children and some adults! This may date from this time. I sat on the fell side above the river falling down the waterfall of Buckstones Jump. To my right I could see Rydal Lower Park with its woodland reaching onto the fell on the other side of the valley, to my left the open fell running away to the mist covered fell head. Hounds had been put in at the “New Hall” and were working through the wood searching for a drag, an occasional bark carried up the valley on the wind. On
the
other
side
of
the
valley,
near
the
ridge
my
eye
caught
a
movement
in
the
bracken.
I
focused
the
binoculars
on
it
and
a
big
mature
stag
appeared
in
the
field
of
view.
A
magnificent
sight,
he
descended
the
fell
side
at
a
slow
jog,
crossed
the
beck
below
me,
so
close
I
heard
the
splash
of
his
hooves.
He
climbed
away
from
the
beck
and
coming
to
the
double
wall
surrounding
the
“outgang”
(path
running
away
from
the
valley
bottom,
used
to
move
stock
to
the
fell),
leapt
over
one
wall,
took
a
stride
between
the
two
and
cleared
the
other
wall
in
a
bound.
Climbing
the
hillside
he
finally
disappeared
over
the
skyline.
I
sat
watching
him,
I’d
totally
forgotten
the
hunt,
on
the
wind
I
could
hear
Sir
Roger
laugh. |
CONTRIBUTED ARTICLES BOOK REVIEWS Echoes & Reflections of a Lost Lakeland Community PUB TALK What's a Bloody Rock Inspector? Mardale Hunt: A History
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