Topic categories:
(Alphabetical)

Wroth Stone

You need to be signed in to respond to this topic

No actionNo action

Displaying 1 to 11 of 11 posts

Page 1 of 1

No actionNo action
11 posts:
Order:   

LesMac
Coventry
1 of 11  Mon 21st Jan 2013 12:47pm  

Does anyone know the purpose of the Wroth Stone in a field just off the A45 near Stretton on Dunsmore? I know about about the cross and the Wroth Silver but I have no idea what the stone was used for. I was last near the stone about 50 years ago so it may have gone by now but as I think it is very ancient it may have been preserved. Les
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
NeilsYard
Coventry
2 of 11  Mon 21st Jan 2013 2:50pm  

News to me Les. Lifted from the web: "Among the issues of the hundred in 1236-7 was 'warth-penny' and among the franchises in 1628 'the wroth monies'. The payment of the 'wroth silver', as it is now called, has continued to the present time. (fn. 9) At dawn on St. Martin's Day (11 November) the steward of the Duke of Buccleuch and the representatives of such parishes and townships as owe these dues assemble on Knightlow Hill (in Ryton-on-Dunsmore) round a large stone, the base of a former cross, with a square hole (originally for the shaft of the cross) in it. The steward reads the 'Charter of Assembly' and calls the names of the parishes; their representatives then cast the required money into the hollow of the stone, saying 'Wroth Silver'. The penalty for non-payment is to provide a white bull with red nose and ears, or to pay a fine of 20s. for every penny not produced. The fees paid in this century are: 1d. from Arley, Astley, Birdingbury, Bramcote, Barnacle and Shilton, Little Walton, and Woolscot; 1½d. from Bourton and Draycot, Napton, Radford Semele, and Whitley; 2½d. from Bubbenhall, Churchover, Ladbroke, Princethorpe, Stretton-on-Dunsmore"
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
LesMac
Coventry
Thread starter
3 of 11  Tue 22nd Jan 2013 11:46am  

Thanks for reply. I have now found an image of the stone in the Pictures of Coventry site. Just enter Knightlow Hill in the search. I now think that the Wroth Stone was just a socket to hold the cross. Les
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
Catshed
Old Chapelfields
4 of 11  Tue 22nd Jan 2013 6:33pm  

When I worked at Lawford Heath we used to see people walking to that stone/hill along the A45 about 7.30 in the morning as some kind of pilgrimage at a certain time of the year.
Triumph - 'The Best Motorcycle in the World'.

Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
Midland Red

5 of 11  Sun 10th Jul 2016 11:52am  

Calendar Customs - 11 November Thumbs up
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
6 of 11  Tue 16th Apr 2019 5:39pm  

Approx five and a half miles north-east of Coventry there was another 'cross', this was on Knightlow Hill in the boundary of Ryton-on-Dunsmore. It rested upon an artificial mound on an ascending road made in the coaching days to make it easier to ascend and descend. Here the Duke of Buccleuch used to collect his wroth money from the parishes, on Nov 11th at sunrise. From this elevated mound could be seen the three spires of Coventry. Four fir trees stood, one at each angle to the cross. The trees represented four knights that were buried there, but the trees were young trees so hardly likely. Knightlow, then in plain English, means the soldier's grave.
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
Midland Red

7 of 11  Tue 16th Apr 2019 5:58pm  

Link to "Wroth Stone" thread Thumbs up
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
8 of 11  Wed 17th Apr 2019 8:54am  

Sorry not aware of the 'wroth stone' topic, tried 'Cross' and other names and nothing came up.
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
heathite
Coventry
9 of 11  Sat 20th Apr 2019 4:21pm  

Wroth Silver representatives from a 19th century photo.
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex
10 of 11  Sun 21st Apr 2019 9:58am  

Heathite, thank you, had no idea what the stone looked like, do know.
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone
Helen F
Warrington
11 of 11  Sun 21st Apr 2019 11:14am  

There are two more images in the library pictures - search for wroth.
Local History and Heritage - Wroth Stone

You need to be signed in to respond to this topic

No actionNo action

Displaying 1 to 11 of 11 posts

Page 1 of 1

No actionNo action

Previous (older) topic

Antelope Motor Cycle Club
|

Next (newer) topic

Thomas Walton: The Man They Couldn't Hang?
You are currently viewing topics in All categories
View topics only in the Local History and Heritage category
 
Home | Forum index | Forum stats | Forum help | Log out | About me
Top of the page
4,113,667

Website & counter by Rob Orland © 2024

Load time: 536ms