An Entity of Type: Thing, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

West Somerset was a local government district located in the English county of Somerset. It merged with Taunton Deane to form Somerset West and Taunton on 1 April 2019.

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dbo:abstract
  • West Somerset was a local government district located in the English county of Somerset. It merged with Taunton Deane to form Somerset West and Taunton on 1 April 2019. (en)
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dbp:commonscat
  • West Somerset Mineral Railway (en)
  • Dunster Castle (en)
  • Hacketty Way packhorse bridge (en)
  • Stogursey Castle (en)
  • West Luccombe packhorse bridge (en)
  • Dunster Yarn Market (en)
  • Tarr Steps (en)
  • Culbone Stone (en)
  • Malmsmead Bridge (en)
  • Porlock Stone Circle (en)
  • Brompton Regis Lock-Up (en)
dbp:dateListed
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  • 1952-06-10 (xsd:date)
  • 1954-04-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1964-04-15 (xsd:date)
  • 1966-03-28 (xsd:date)
  • 1968-10-24 (xsd:date)
  • 1969-03-10 (xsd:date)
  • 1972-01-04 (xsd:date)
  • 1975-06-23 (xsd:date)
  • 1976-01-29 (xsd:date)
  • 1976-12-22 (xsd:date)
  • 1977-10-20 (xsd:date)
  • 1981-10-09 (xsd:date)
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dbp:name
dbp:notes
  • 1970.0
  • 1450.0
  • A bowl barrow approximately in diameter. (en)
  • The remains of a cross dating from around 1300. A stone base supports the remains of the shaft which is now high. (en)
  • A round barrow cemetery at Wambarrows on Winsford Hill. There are at least five barrows ranging in diameter from to . (en)
  • Earthworks and ruins from an iron mine opened in the 1850s. The buildings were demolished in 1907. (en)
  • Two cairns one of which is in diameter and the other . Each is around high. (en)
  • Two standing and two recumbent stones. The tallest standing stone is high. (en)
  • A diameter mound which has been described as both a round barrow and bowl barrow. (en)
  • Earthworks of Mounsey Castle, an Iron Age irregular triangular earthwork. It is surrounded by the remains of coursed stone walling, with an entrance to the west. It overlooks the River Barle. (en)
  • The Culbone Stone, an early mediaeval standing stone approximately one metre in height. It lies in woodland close to the parish boundary, and features an incised wheeled cross, the style of which suggests it dates from 7th to 9th century. The stone is legally protected as a scheduled monument. It has been suggested that the stone has been moved from its original site as part of the Culbone Hill Stone Row. (en)
  • The remains of a Hamstone village cross on the High Street is from the Middle Ages. Approximately of the original shaft is still in the socket stone. (en)
  • A turf covered mound with stones protruding from it. It was previously classified as a barrow. (en)
  • Five standing stones, one of which is broken, in two intersecting rows. The largest is high. (en)
  • The remaining walls and footings of a medieval chapel (en)
  • A stone circle which originally had 21 stones. 14 stones remain half of which are upright and the other half recumbent. The tallest of the standing stones is high. (en)
  • A cross dating from the 14th century, which is on the Heritage at Risk Register. It has two steps and an octagonal shaft supporting a canopied head. (en)
  • Grass covered stony mounds previously classified as cairns and now as round barrows. Each approximately in diameter. (en)
  • Two rows of standing stones, up to high, some of which are now recumbent. (en)
  • A long row of 50 standing stones. The tallest of which is high. (en)
  • Two cairns approximately apart. The mound on the summit of the hill is in diameter and the other . (en)
  • A stone bridge over the River Barle with five arches each with a span of . It was built in the late medieval period with the first documentary evidence being from 1610. Restoration work was undertaken in 1875, and again following damage during flooding in 1952. (en)
  • A rope-worked inclined plane long to bring the ore down a vertical interval on a 1 in 4 gradient on the West Somerset Mineral Railway. (en)
  • A diameter stoney mound. (en)
  • A diameter stony mound covered in turf. (en)
  • A Type 24 pillbox made of reinforced concrete. (en)
  • A bowl barrow which is in diameter and high. (en)
  • A bowl barrow which is in diameter. (en)
  • A bowl barrow with a diameter of and height of . (en)
  • A cairn and standing stones . (en)
  • A cairn of diameter. (en)
  • A collection of several standing stones . (en)
  • A collection of standing stones and a cairn. (en)
  • A concrete pillbox which is high. (en)
  • A line of three small stones. (en)
  • A possible round barrow which is long and wide. (en)
  • A round barrow approximately in diameter. (en)
  • A round barrow which is in diameter. (en)
  • A round cairn which is in diameter. (en)
  • A stone cairn with a surrounding rim of diameter. (en)
  • A stone packhorse bridge over Horner Water. (en)
  • A stone packhorse bridge over Winn Brook. (en)
  • A stone pottery kiln. (en)
  • An earth and stone mound, in diameter and high. (en)
  • An Enclosure which may have been a univallate Iron Age hill fort. The enclosure is approximately in diameter and covers around . It is surrounded by a bank and ditch about wide and high. The hill fort has been damaged in recent years due to forestry plantation. (en)
  • A collection of several standing stones arranged into three rows (en)
  • Road Castle is an Iron Age bank and ditch enclosure. The ditch is almost square in plan with rounded corners and covers an area of approximately . (en)
  • The Tarr Steps are a clapper bridge across the River Barle in the Exmoor National Park. A typical clapper bridge construction, the bridge possibly dates to around 1000 BC. The stone slabs weigh up to 1-2 tons apiece. The bridge is long and has 17 spans. (en)
  • Three round barrows and the Neolithic burial chamber. (en)
  • Three standing and five recumbent stones. (en)
  • Three standing stones between and high. (en)
  • Three standing stones. (en)
  • Two barrows, partially excavated in 1896. (en)
  • Two mounds, one of in diameter and the other . (en)
  • Two standing and one recumbent stones. (en)
  • Two standing stones apart. Each is to high. (en)
  • Two standing stones between and high. (en)
  • Robber's Bridge is an old masonry arch bridge in the royal forest of Exmoor, carrying the minor road from Porlock Hill to Oare. It crosses Weir Water and is located down a steep, wooded lane beneath overhanging trees. (en)
  • A small stone building used as the village lock-up. The original door has been blocked up and a new doorway constructed. (en)
  • Two cairns and two bowl barrows dating from the Bronze Age three of them have been disturbed or partially excavated in the past. (en)
  • Grabbist hillfort is an Iron Age oval hillfort. The fort is long and wide, and is surrounded by a counterscarp, which measures in height. It is also surrounded by a ditch, which ranges up to wide and deep. The bank has a peak height of , and, on the northern and western sides, there is a second bank, which leads to the northeastern corner being the most strongly defended. (en)
  • One of two Iron Age hillforts within of each other. This one is around in diameter and surrounded by a bank up to high. (en)
  • Three bowl barrows which are between and in diameter. (en)
  • A stone lined holy well in the grounds of the former St Pancras Chapel which is now a private house. (en)
  • Trendle Ring is a late prehistoric earthwork. The site, which covers , is surrounded by a single rampart with a ditch and has a simple opening on the east, uphill side. The hillside is steep and there are two areas which may have been more level platforms. It is situated on the slope of a hill which rises above the ring. (en)
  • Two bowl barrows each approximately in diameter. An Ordnance Survey trig point is on the more southerly of the two barrows. (en)
  • The remains of a medieval cross which still has its octagonal base and of the shaft. (en)
  • A defended settlement on the north-facing slope of Dunkery Hill. It has a single rampart and external ditch, enclosing . The rampart is still visible and the ditch on the east side is used as a trackway. (en)
  • A collection of two cairns, and several standing stones . (en)
  • Wiveliscombe Barrow. which was previously known as Eastern Barrow is in diameter. (en)
  • A 16th century stone well house over a medieval holy well. It may have been the water supply for Dunster Priory. (en)
  • Two stones apart. One is high and the other high. The wide mound is from the nearest stone. (en)
  • A bowl barrow south of The Chains, which is in diameter and high. (en)
  • Oldberry Castle is an Iron Age hill fort. The site overlooks the town and the ancient crossing point of the River Barle. It is an irregular oval shape measuring by . It is defended by a bank measuring wide and high, and a wide ditch. (en)
  • A group of four bowl barrows which straddles the border between Somerset and Devon. (en)
  • A collection of nine round cairns on a ridge of Selworthy Beacon. (en)
  • A cemetery cairn which was adapted in the 16th century for use as a fire beacon. The original earth and stone mound is topped with a diameter stone heap. (en)
  • A stone two arch packhorse bridge carrying a minor road over Badgworthy Water. (en)
  • Three round barrows two of which are approximately in diameter. The largest, most southerly is the largest at approximately in diameter and has an Ordnance Survey trig point on it. (en)
  • A medieval stone packhorse bridge, with two arches, over the River Exe. (en)
  • A ventilation chimney at the disused Bearland Wood Iron Mine. A fire at the base of the shaft was used to draw air and gasses from the mine. The chimney is high and in diameter at the base. (en)
  • A cairn which is in diameter and high. Excavations have found the remains of several bodies and flint tools. (en)
  • Several bowl and round barrows ranging from to in diameter. (en)
  • The socket stone and part of the shaft of a medieval cross on the main street in Doniford. (en)
  • A single arch packhorse bridge built of red sandstone. (en)
  • The octagonal Yarn Market has a central stone pier which supports a heavy timber framework for the structure. The slate roof has a central wooden lantern topped by a weather vane. The roof is interrupted by a series of dormer windows. Around the periphery is a low stone wall and vertical timber supports. One of the roof beams has a hole in it, a result of cannon fire in the Civil War, when Dunster Castle was a besieged Royalist stronghold. Following the damage, it was restored in 1647 to its present condition. (en)
  • Earthworks of several buildings cut into the terraces on the side of the hill. It has been added to the Heritage at Risk Register because of the vulnerability to plant growth. (en)
  • A cairn or round barrow which is between and in diameter. (en)
  • A stone circle which has 25 standing stones, some which were previously part of the circle are no longer present. The circle has a diameter of . (en)
  • The ruins of a Chantry Chapel formed in 1329. The stonework is Blue Lias but is now ruined and covered in ivy. Little of the slate roof remains. The building was previously thatched. (en)
  • A collection of cairns, and several standing stones . (en)
  • A collection of five round cairns each of which is between and in diameter. (en)
  • Dunster Castle is a former motte and bailey castle and now a country house on the top of a steep hill called the Tor. It has been fortified since the late Anglo-Saxon period. After the Norman conquest of England in the 11th century, William de Mohun constructed a timber castle on the site as part of the pacification of Somerset. A stone shell keep was built on the motte by the start of the 12th century, and the castle survived a siege during the early years of the Anarchy. At the end of the 14th century the de Mohuns sold the castle to the Luttrell family, who continued to occupy the property until the late 20th century. In 1976 Colonel Walter Luttrell gave Dunster Castle and most of its contents to the National Trust, which operates it as a tourist attraction. (en)
  • An enclosure and settlement covering and surrounded by a bank. (en)
  • Six standing stones the tallest of which are high. (en)
  • A high standing stone and a split fragment from the stone. (en)
  • A natural spring which has been converted into a well by the use of stone slabs. (en)
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dbp:uploadDesc
  • Landacre Bridge At Ngr Ss 8165 3610 (en)
  • Dunster Castle and gatehouse (en)
  • Tarr Steps (en)
  • Yarn Market (en)
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  • Q2969173 (en)
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  • Q7618366 (en)
  • Q7655826 (en)
  • Q7986550 (en)
  • Q8049414 (en)
dcterms:subject
rdfs:comment
  • West Somerset was a local government district located in the English county of Somerset. It merged with Taunton Deane to form Somerset West and Taunton on 1 April 2019. (en)
rdfs:label
  • Scheduled monuments in West Somerset (H–Z) (en)
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