Brown Willy

Brown Willy (possibly from Cornish Bronn Wennili meaning "hill of swallows"[1] or from Cornish Bronn Ewhella meaning "highest hill") is a hill in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The summit, at 1,378 feet (420 metres) above sea level, is the highest point of Bodmin Moor and of Cornwall as a whole. It is about 2 12 miles (4 kilometres) northwest of Bolventor and 4 miles (6 kilometres) southeast of Camelford. The hill has a variable appearance that depends on the vantage point from which it is seen. It bears the conical appearance of a sugarloaf from the north but widens into a long multi-peaked crest from closer range.[2]

Brown Willy
Bronn Wennili
Brown Willy from the summit of Rough Tor
Highest point
Elevation420 m (1,380 ft)
Prominence314 m (1,030 ft)
Parent peakHigh Willhays
ListingMarilyn, County Top
Coordinates50°35′20″N 4°36′08″W
Geography
Brown Willy
Brown Willy shown within Cornwall
Brown Willy
Brown Willy (England)
LocationBodmin Moor, Cornwall, England, UK
OS gridSX158799
Topo mapOS Landranger 201

Toponymy

The first part of the hill's name is a common Brythonic element meaning "breast, pap; hill-side, slope, breast (of hill)", which is frequent in Welsh placenames.[3] The Cornish historian and language expert Henry Jenner suggested that the name came from a corruption of the Cornish words bronn ughella/ewhella meaning "highest hill",[4] as it is the highest point of Bodmin Moor and of Cornwall. The highest hill in Devon has the similar name, High Willhays which falls in line with this theory. More recently, toponymist Craig Weatherhill has put forward the alternative suggestion that it could be from 'Bronn Wennili' which translates as 'Hill of Swallows'. The name has evolved through a variety of historical spellings as follows: Brunwenely c.1200, 1239; Brown Wenely 1239; Brenwenelyn 1276; Bronwenely, Brunwely 1280; Brounwenely 1350, 1362; Broun Welyn 1386; Brounwenyly 1401; Brownwenelegh 1450, 1470; Brounwellye, Bronwelly 1576; Brown-wellye 1584; Brounwellie 1639; Menar Brownuello 1754.[5]

It has frequently been noted on lists of unusual place names.[6] In 2012 a campaign was launched to have the hill's name restored to the original Bronn Wennili on the grounds that it would be "slightly more attractive to residents and tourists than Brown Willy". Cornish residents objected to the idea. One commented: "It's been Brown Willy for as far back as living memory goes and I suspect, as others have pointed out, that it will always be called that, whatever name we may formally give it."[7] The Daily Telegraph ran an editorial supporting the existing name and called for campaigners to keep their "hands off Brown Willy".[8]

Geography and geology

The summit of Brown Willy is 1,378 feet (420 metres) above sea level, the highest point on Bodmin Moor and in the county of Cornwall.[7][9][10] The geography of the surrounding terrain is typical of Bodmin Moor – tors surrounded by desolate moorland.[11] Streams and marshes are common surrounding the summit, and the River Fowey rises nearby. There are naturally occurring piles of granite boulders around the summit, and one, known as the Cheesewring is composed of five separate rocks which get progressively higher towards the top.[9]

The hill is part of a 1,221-acre (494-hectare) estate known as Fernacre and includes a five-bedroom farm house. The property was put on the market in September 2016 for £2.8 million and sold to an undisclosed buyer the following April. The new owner has the grazing rights for the property and shooting rights for deer, snipe and woodcock. Under the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000, the public will continue to have the right to walk on the hill.[12][13]

Brown Willy Cairns

Brown Willy Summit (North) Cairn with Ordnance Survey triangulation station

There are two man-made cairns on the summit.[14] Brown Willy Summit Cairn or Brown Willy North Cairn is a man made rock pile that sits alongside an Ordnance Survey triangulation station.[15]

The Cornish word for "cairn" is karn (from karnow, meaning "rock piles"), and it has been suggested that Cornwall's ancient name Kernow is related.[16][17] William Copeland Borlase classified ridge-top cairns such as these in the most common category a "bowl"- or "cone"-shaped tumulus. He also referred to them as "sepulchral mounds" but admitted that burials had not been found at many.[18] Brown Willy Summit Cairn has never been excavated and folklore suggests an ancient Cornish king may lie entombed underneath.[15] Nicholas Johnson and Peter Rose dated nine of the cairns on Bodmin Moor, eight gave mean date ranges between 2162 and 1746 cal BC, suggesting the early Bronze Age was the main building period for cairns of this type.[19] These are amongst the most intact due to their remote and inaccessible location. Many rocks from similar cairns have been spoiled and removed over centuries of neglect to be re-used in dry stone walling and other local construction.[20]

Rodney Castleton has suggested that from the centre of Stannon stone circle, the autumn equinox sun rises over Brown Willy North Cairn.[21] and Christopher Tilley refers to a "dramatic association with Rough Tor.[22] These purported alignments have been taken as evidence of some astronomical purpose in cairn placement and construction.

Recreation

Here, in his deafness and his loneliness,

My father's sad grey eyes in gathering dusk
Saw Roughtor and Brown Willy hide the view

Of that bold coast-line where he was not born—

John Betjeman, Summoned by Bells (1960)[23]

Brown Willy is a popular destination for walkers and is said to be one of "the UK's best-loved high points".[11] The hill features in an annual race held on New Year's Day that starts and finishes at Jamaica Inn, an old coaching inn made famous by Daphne du Maurier's 1936 novel of the same name.[11][24]

The hill is regarded as a sacred mountain by members of the Aetherius Society, a UFO religion founded in 1954 by George King. They believe that Brown Willy was charged with "holy energy" on 23 November, which they celebrate each year as "Charging Day", and gather at the hill on that day each year to celebrate the sun's alignment with "positive and negative rocks".[25] Other Aetherian "holy mountains" include Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, a mountain in California, two in New South Wales in Australia and two in Devon.[25]

Environment

The hill is known for a meteorological phenomenon known as the Brown Willy effect, in which heavy rainfall develops over high ground and then travels downwind for a long distance. The effect produces heavy localised rain which can cause disastrous flash flooding such as the Boscastle flood of 2004. In another case when the effect was manifested, a continuous line of showers developed on 27 March 2006 stretching 145 miles from Brown Willy to Oxfordshire.[26]

Brown Willy is unusual in that, unlike other hills on Bodmin Moor, there is little evidence of prehistoric settlement around it. It may have instead been set aside for use as a communal area for people from the surrounding settlements, who may have used the ridge as a ceremonial procession route.[27] There are no house circles or platforms in the area of the summit. The remains of seventeen houses and platforms have been found on the lower part of the eastern slopes and another 23 low on the western slopes; they were crudely constructed and probably only used seasonally.[28] Nearly two-thirds of them were constructed in positions with a clear line of sight to the summit of Brown Willy and the nearby hill of Rough Tor, suggesting that the hilltops were viewed as special places.[29]

Media

It is the location for a comedy film of the same name, about two 40-year-old former school-friends on a misguided stag do, written and directed by Brett Harvey.[30]

References

  1. Steven Morris (13 September 2016). "Brown Willy: Cornwall's highest point up for sale at £2.8m". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 September 2020.
  2. Humphreys, Rob (2008). The Rough Guide to Britain. Rough Guides. p. 360. ISBN 978-1-85828-549-8.
  3. Coates, Richard; Breeze, Andrew (2000). Celtic voices, English places: studies of the Celtic impact on place-names in England. Shaun Tyas. ISBN 978-1-900289-41-2.
  4. Jenner, Henry (1912). History in Cornish place-names. Oxford University. p. 12. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
  5. Padel, Oliver James (1988). A popular dictionary of Cornish place-names. A. Hodge. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-906720-15-8.
  6. Parker, Quentin (2010). Welcome to Horneytown, North Carolina, Population: 15: An insider's guide to 201 of the world's weirdest and wildest places. Adams Media. pp. viii. ISBN 9781440507397.
  7. "Campaign to change Brown Willy's name". BBC News. 5 November 2012.
  8. "Hands off Brown Willy". The Daily Telegraph. 5 November 2012.
  9. Charles Knight (1866). The English Cyclopaedia: Geography. Bradbury, Evans. p. 588. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
  10. Charlotte Maria S. Mason (1881). The Forty Shires: Their History, Scenery, Arts, and Legends, p. 297. Retrieved 17 March 2011.
  11. Muir, Jonny (2011). "Brown Willy". The UK's County Tops: Reaching the top of 91 historic counties (First ed.). Milnthorpe: Cicerone. pp. 20–21. ISBN 978-1-85284-629-9.
  12. "Brown Willy is sold". The Cornishman. 27 April 2017. p. 26.
  13. OS Explorer Bodmin Moor (Map). Southampton: Ordnance Survey. 2015. ISBN 978 0 319 24311 4.
  14. Prehistoric Society (London; England) (2006). Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, p. 343. Prehistoric Society. Retrieved 18 March 2011.
  15. Sabine Baring-Gould (1923). A Book of Cornwall. Methuen & Co. Ltd. Retrieved 17 March 2011.
  16. Gerva Kynsa dhe Dressa Gradh – Quick Reference Online Cornish Dictionary
  17. R. Morton Nance (July 1990) [1934]. An English-Cornish and Cornish-English Dictionary. Originally printed for the Federation of Old Cornwall Societies by J. Lanham. ISBN 978-1-85022-055-8.
  18. William Copeland Borlase (April 1994) [1872]. Nænia Cornubiæ, a descriptive essay, illustrative of the sepulchres and funereal customs of the early inhabitants of the County of Cornwall. Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, London. ISBN 978-1-897853-36-8.
  19. Nicholas Johnson; Peter Rose; Desmond Bonney (July 1994). Bodmin Moor: an archaeological survey. The human landscape to c.1800, p. 40. English Heritage. ISBN 978-1-85074-381-1. Retrieved 22 May 2011.
  20. Karin Altenberg (October 2003). Experiencing Landscapes: A Study of Space and Identity in Three Marginal Areas of Medieval Britain and Sweden, p. 109. Almqvist & Wiksell. ISBN 978-91-22-01997-8. Retrieved 17 March 2011.
  21. Rodney Castleden (1992). Neolithic Britain: New Stone Age Sites of England, Scotland, and Wales. Routledge. pp. 48–. ISBN 978-0-415-05845-2. Retrieved 17 March 2011.
  22. Christopher Tilley (15 July 2010). Interpreting Landscapes: geologies, topographies, identities ;. Explorations in Landscape Phenomenology 3. Left Coast Press. pp. 389–. ISBN 978-1-59874-374-6. Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  23. Betjeman, John (1960). "Chapter VIII: Cornwall in Adolescence". Summoned by Bells. John Murray. p. 79.
  24. Du Maurier, Daphne (1936). Jamaica Inn. New York: HarperCollins. p. 49. ISBN 9780062404893.
  25. "Society visits its holy mountain of Brown Willy on pilgrimage". Cornish Guardian. 7 December 2011. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 4 January 2012.
  26. "Floods". UKTV. Retrieved 4 January 2012.
  27. Bender, Barbara; Hamilton, Sue; Tilley, Christopher (2008). Stone Worlds: Narrative and Reflexivity in Landscape Archaeology. Left Coast Press. p. 231. ISBN 978-1-59874-219-0.
  28. Bender, Hamilton & Tilley (2008), p. 388
  29. Bender, Hamilton & Tilley (2008), p. 440
  30. Brown Willy is Cornwall’s answer to Withnail & I: Brown Willy is Cornwall’s answer to Withnail & I, accessdate: May 2, 2016
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