- Nine Ladies
-
Nine Ladies (53°10′5″N 1°37′44″W / 53.16806°N 1.62889°W) is a Bronze Age stone circle located on Stanton Moor, Derbyshire, England.[1] Part of the Peak District National Park, the site is owned by English Heritage and is often visited by tourists and hill walkers. Druids and pagans occasionally celebrate summer solstice there.[2]
Contents
Description
There are nine upright stones, each of local millstone grit, each less than a metre high sat in clearing in a modern wood planted on Stanton Moor.[3] They sit in a rough circle with a gap at the south side of the circle where no stone-hole has been found. However, an additional stone, lying flat rather than upright, was discovered after being exposed as a cropmark in the dry weather of 1976. It is now visible.[4] The circle is built on an embankment which levelled the local terrain.[5] The small "King Stone" lies forty metres from the circle to the west-south-west and is clearly visible from it.[1]
The Nine Ladies were among the 28 archetypal monuments in England and Wales included in General Pitt-Rivers’ Schedule to the first Ancient Monuments Protection Act, which became law in 1882. It was taken into state care the following year.[6]
Quarry protest
The site has been the focus of a long-running environmental protest.
In 1999 Stancliffe Stone Ltd submitted a planning application re-open two dormant quarries (Endcliffe and Lees Cross) on the wooded hillside beside Stanton Moor. The proposed quarry was only 200 m from Nine Ladies, on land owned by Haddon Hall estate and leased to Stancliffe Stone.
A local protest group SLAG (Stanton Lees Action Group) was set up to oppose the quarry. The group was joined by environmental protestors who set up a long-running and controversial protest camp. They built many tree houses, from which the inhabitants are hard to evict. The protesters defied a court eviction order in February 2004, and continued to occupy the site until the winter of 2008-09.
In 2004 the High Court classified the two quarries as dormant. This decision was appealed but the classification was upheld in June 2005.[7] This meant that the quarries could not re-open until the Peak District National Park Authority agreed on a set of working conditions for them. In 2008 permission to quarry near the circle was finally revoked[8]
Modern Druid Activity
The site is a popular venue for Pagan worship, particularly around the time of the solstices.[9]. In part Pagan protestors helped fight against the quarrying upon the moor.[10] However, the Pagan worshippers at the site are not a unified body and so tensions exist. Some Pagans may leave offerings in the circle, but other druids regard it as litter.[11]
Notes
References
- Blain, Jenny; Wallis, Robert J. (2007). Sacred sites--contested rites/rights: Pagan engagements with archaeological monuments. Eastbourne, UK: Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 1845191307.
- Burl, A. (1995). The Stone Circles of Britain, Ireland and Brittany. New Haven:CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-06331-8.
- Cope, J. (1998). The Modern Antiquarian. London: Thorsons. ISBN 0-7225-3599-6.
- Dugan, Emily (5 August 2008). "The eco-warriors who became local heroes". The Independent (London). http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/the-ecowarriors-who-became-local-heroes-951823.html. Retrieved 2009-09-06.
- McGuire, Stella; Smith, Ken (2007). "Stanton Moor Conservation Plan 2007" (PDF). Peak District National Park Authority. http://www.peakdistrict.org/stantonmoor.pdf. Retrieved 2009-09-06.
- Isherwood, R. (2004). Meanings and Values within a Contested Landscape: the case of the Nine Ladies Stone Circle, Stanton Moor, Derbyshire. (Unpublished MA dissertation). Department of Art History and Archaeology, University of Manchester.
External links
- Nine Ladies page: English Heritage
- Nine Ladies Anti-Quarry Campaign
- Guardian Article: Eco-warriors sense victory in battle to protect Nine Ladies
Places of Interest in Derbyshire Alfreton Hall • Alport Castles • Anchor Church • Arbor Low • Ardotalia (Melandra Castle) • Barlborough Hall • Beauchief Abbey • Black Rocks (Derbyshire) • Blue John Cavern • Bolsover Castle • Bradbourne Hall • Buxton Opera House • Buxton Museum & Art Gallery • Calke Abbey • Carsington Water • Chatsworth • Codnor Castle • Coxbench Hall • Creswell Crags • Crooked Spire • Cromford and High Peak Railway • Cromford Mill • Derby Museum & Art Gallery • Derbyshire Dales Narrow Gauge Railway • Derwent Reservoir • Derwent Valley Mills • Devonshire Dome • Dovedale • Duffield Castle • Ecclesbourne Valley Railway • Ednaston Manor • Elvaston Castle • Eyam Hall • Flagg Hall • Foremark Reservoir • Great Longstone Hall • Haddon Hall • Hardwick Hall • Hartington Hall • Heage Windmill • Heights of Abraham • High Peak Junction • Hob Hurst's House • Howden Reservoir • Ilam Park • Kedleston Hall • Kinder Scout • Ladybower Reservoir • Leawood Pump House • Longdendale Reservoir Chain • Longdendale Trail • Longford Hall • Mam Tor • Melbourne Hall • Midland Railway – Butterley • Millennium Walkway, New Mills • Minninglow • Monsal Dale • National Tramway Museum • National Stone Centre • Nine Ladies Stone Circle • Norbury Hall • Odin Mine • Ogston Reservoir • Parwich Hall • Peak Cavern • Peak Rail • Peveril Castle • Pilsbury Castle • Poole's Cavern • Renishaw Hall • Riber Castle • St Helen's House • Shining Cliff Woods • Speedwell Cavern • Stainsby Mill • Sudbury Hall • Sutton Scarsdale Hall • Thornbridge Hall • Thorpe Cloud • Tissington Hall • Treak Cliff Cavern • Well dressing • Willersley Castle • Wingfield Manor
Categories:- Bronze Age sites in England
- English Heritage sites in Derbyshire
- Environmental protests
- Stone circles in England
- Peak District
- Protests in England
- Numeric epithets
- Archaeological sites in Derbyshire
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.