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Gibbet Hill, in the north-west of the area, is named after the gibbet from which Edward Allport was hanged for the murder of London silk dyer John Johnson in the area on 28 March 1729.
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Gibbet and Hill
The downland to the south rises steeply out of the river valley providing scenic views, including Watership Down ( made famous by the novel of the same name ), Beacon Hill and Combe Gibbet.
Gibbet Hill, a short walk away on top of the Devil's Punch Bowl, is where murderers and robbers were hung in chains to warn others.
Notable hills include: Carrigbyrne Hill, Camross ( or Camaross ) Hill ( 181 m ), Carrigmaistia ( 167 m ), Bree Hill ( 179 m ), Gibbet Hill, Vinegar Hill, Slievecoiltia and Forth Mountain ( 237 m ), and Tara Hill.
This was 18 years before the murder of the unknown sailor on Gibbet Hill so this event was clearly not the origin of the name.
On 11 April 1661, diarist Samuel Pepys mentions passing under " the man that hangs upon Shooters Hill " ( probably a highwayman hanged and left to rot as a warning to other criminals-at ' Gibbet Field ', now part of the local golf-course ).
The place where this occurred was just to the right ( when travelling towards Launceston ) of the Midlands Highway on the northern side of Perth, and is marked by a sign which reads " Gibbet Hill ".
Although this site is no longer referred to as Gibbet Hill, and was undeveloped until ( at least ) 1906, the toponomy has survived in the name of Gibbet Hill Wood ; an area which Birmingham City Council have identified as " an area of potential archaeological importance " due to " surviving archaeological remains ".
on the top of the downs near Walbury Hill and Combe Gibbet, overlooking the village of Inkpen and the valley of the River Kennet.
To deter highwaymen from attacking travellers along the road between Tavistock and Okehampton, captured highwaymen were hanged from a gibbet on what is now known as ' Gibbet Hill '.
The " Combe Gibbet " Race takes in the highest hill in the South East of England ; Walbury Hill, the highest in Hampshire ; Pilot Hill as well as Ladle Hill and the edge of Watership Down before entering Overton the source of the River Test.
Gibbet and north-west
The north-west end is at the car park on top of Walbury Hill, near to the landmark Combe Gibbet, and the south-east end is Emsworth town square.
Gibbet and is
Caxton Gibbet is a small knoll on Ermine Street ( now the A1198 ) in England, running between London and Huntingdon, near its crossing with the road ( now the A428 ) between Oxford and Cambridge.
Cambridgeshire County Record Office, which is part of Cambridgeshire Archives and Local Studies, says that the following entry in the manuscripts of William Cole, a Cambridgeshire antiquarian ( 1714-1782 ) has been taken to refer to the Caxton Gibbet although there is no more specific mention of the actual location in the text.
It is said that Morton borrowed the design from the Halifax Gibbet and carried a model of it from Halifax to Edinburgh.
Combe Gibbet is a gibbet at the top of Gallows Down, near the village and just within the civil parish of Combe in Berkshire ( formerly Hampshire ).
The Combe Gibbet is also the start of a scenic 16 mile off-road race to Overton organised by the Overton Harriers and Athletic Club.
Overton Harriers host two races ; the Overton 5 a road race which takes in two laps of the village, and the Combe Gibbet race which is a 16 mile point to point race from Walbury Hill to Overton.
A junction of the A371 just south of the village is known as Jack White's Gibbet as it was the site of the hanging of White for the murder of Robert Sutton in 1730.
Gibbet and named
On the adjacent Gallows Down, but just within Combe parish, are Combe Gibbet and the incorrectly named Inkpen Long Barrow.
Gibbet and after
In the 1760s, after some pirates were hanged from one of the island's scrubby trees, it became known as Gibbet Island.
Breads was imprisoned in the Ypres Tower and then hanged, after which his body was left to rot for more than 20 years in an iron cage on Gibbet Marsh.
* Caxton Gibbet: A two-lane £ 55 million dual carriageway section opened on 24 May 2007 after widening works started by the Highways Agency in August 2005, linking this point to a grade-separated junction at Hardwick ( about further east ).
Gibbet and gibbet
" Fly by the Gibbet " may also have been used as a sailing expression to refer to hoisting the gibbet sail.
There are also three medieval moated sites further from the road: Caxton Moats, which has signs of Anglo-Saxon or Norman occupation ; Caxton Pastures, south-west of Caxton Gibbet, which may have belonged to John of Caxton, a 13th century landowner ; and Swansley, south-east of the gibbet.
Gibbet and from
The first recorded execution in Halifax dates from 1280, but that execution may have been by sword, axe, or by use of the Gibbet.
* Mossop, D., Caxton Gibbet, available from Cambridge Local Studies Collection includes an extensive analysis of the tales connected with Caxton Gibbett, their possible sources, correlates and the ( lack of ) sources for any of them.
File: Gallows Down near Inkpen-geograph. org. uk-62317. jpg | Looking up at Combe Gibbet from the west
Gibbet and which
The group was influenced by the Italian Mannaia ( or Mannaja ), the Scottish Maiden and the Halifax Gibbet, which was fitted with an axe head weighing 7 pounds 12 ounces ( 3. 5 kg ).
Among the curious customs of Halifax was the Gibbet Law, which was probably established by a prescriptive right to protect the wool trade, and gave the inhabitants the power of executing any one taken within their liberty, who, when tried by a jury of sixteen of the frith-burgesses, was found guilty of the theft of any goods of the value of more than 13d.
The Gibbet Rath massacre was the massacre of some 300 – 500 rebels by British forces which took place during the Irish Rebellion of 1798 on the Curragh of Kildare on 29 May 1798.
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