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The Icknield Way in East Anglia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2013

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Extract

Though it is now impossible to trace a connected road from end to end, there is little doubt that a series of trackways between Norfolk and Wiltshire have from very early times been known as the Icknield Way, and it is highly probable that originally they provided through communication between the south-west of England and the Norfolk coast. These trackways appear to be prehistoric, to have been utilised but never re-made by the Romans, avoiding the upper levels of the hills and skirting the slopes where the forest presumably ended. The adjacent country is dotted with hill-forts, barrows, and remains of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages.

Type
Original Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1918

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References

page 540 note * “Saga-Book of the Viking Club,” Jan., 1905.

page 540 note † “Earthwork in England,” p. 506.

page 540 note ‡ Copinger's “Manors of Suffolk.”

page 541 note * “Earthwork in England,” p. 183.

page 541 note † “Folk-Memory,” p. 73; also Conybeare's, Roman Britain,” pp. 144–5Google Scholar.

page 542 note * History of Norfolk,” Vol. III., p. 109 Google Scholar.

page 542 note † Martin‘s, History of Thetford,” Appendix, p. 123 Google Scholar.

page 542 note ‡ Ibid, p. 193.

page 545 note * Mackinlay's, St. Edmund, King and Martyr,” p. 374 Google Scholar.

page 545 note † Martin's, History of Thetford,” p. 194 Google Scholar.

page 547 note * P.S.E.A., Proceedings,” Vol. I., p. 46 Google Scholar.

page 547 note * Hunt's, Capital of the Ancient Kingdom of East Anglia,” p. 184 Google Scholar.

page 547 note † “Antiquary,” Jan., 1909.