The Isle of Man: Stone Age to Swinging Sixties
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About this ebook
Many people don’t know that the tiny Isle of Man, midway between the coasts of Lancashire and Northern Ireland, is one of the richest historic landscapes in Europe. Packed into its 225 square miles are dramatic stories of Bronze Age conflict, Viking warriors, medieval kings, smugglers, maritime and railway history, wartime airfields, and even a pirate radio station.
Add to that the island's unique motorsport heritage (on two, three and four wheels), and you have a combination unrivaled anywhere in the British Isles. Whatever your passion, or whichever historical period appeals to you, the Isle of Man will have something fascinating to offer. Packed with illustrations, and using first-hand accounts to enhance the narrative, this book takes you on a chronological journey through the island’s history, before offering a series of guided tours which pick up the highlights of each district. From Bronze Age hill forts to medieval castles, from heritage railways to historic quaysides, from award-winning museums to country mansions, the Isle of Man has it all. Let this book be your guide to historic Britain's best-kept secret, as you explore a place untouched by the hectic pace of twenty-first-century life.
Includes photos
Matthew Richardson
Matthew Richardson is Curator of Social History at Manx National Heritage. He has a long-term interest in military history and has published several outstanding books on the subject including 1914: Voices from the Battlefields, The Hunger War: Food, Rations and Rationing 1914-1918 and Eyewitness on the Somme 1916. He also has a keen interest in the history of the Isle of Man TT and, in addition to producing several acclaimed exhibitions on this subject, worked with Dave Molyneux on The Racer’s Edge: Memoirs of an Isle of Man TT Legend.
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The Isle of Man - Matthew Richardson
Introduction
The Isle of Man is located in the Irish Sea, at the geographical centre of the British Isles. It is not, and never has been, a part of the United Kingdom. Instead it is a crown dependency, owing its allegiance directly to the British monarch, who holds the title Lord of Man. The Island’s history, though connected with that of the United Kingdom, is separate, and as a result a unique identity, culture and legal/political framework have developed here. The Island is self-governing through its parliament, known as Tynwald, which is stated to be the oldest continuous political assembly in the world. The crown is represented on the Island by a Lieutenant-Governor, whose roles and functions are now largely symbolic. Though geographically small, the Island has at many times played a disproportionately significant part in British history.
Many visitors are amazed to discover the sheer number of ‘oldests’, ‘and ‘firsts’ associated with the Isle of Man. Though only 225 square miles in area, the Island incorporates features reminiscent of various parts of the surrounding countries, ranging from high heather moorland, lush farmland and coastal heath.
The capital, Douglas, is situated on the east coast and is home to the Island’s legislative buildings. Its financial services sector, a major part of the Island’s economy, is also largely based here. To the south lies Castletown, overlooked by the imposing Castle Rushen and formerly the Island’s capital and administrative centre. To the north is the town of Ramsey, while in the west lies Peel, a former fishing port and also dominated by a castle.
The Island has its own language, Manx Gaelic, which, though once in sharp decline, has undergone a resurgence in recent years. The Celtic inhabitants of the Island were never conquered by either the Romans or Anglo-Saxons, though the Norse raiders of the ninth century settled here in great numbers. They made the Island the centre of the Viking Kingdom of Mann and the Isles. Later the Isle of Man became a bargaining chip in the Anglo-Scottish wars. Finally, it was purchased in 1765 by the crown from the Dukes of Atholl, by whom it had been inherited.
Today, the Island is perhaps best known for the tailless cat, and for the annual TT motorcycle races which are staged here each summer, but it is a place which will reward the curious traveller through the remarkable depth and richness of its culture and history.
CHAPTER 1
Celts and Vikings
The first humans arrived on the Isle of Man in the Mesolithic period, around 8000 BC. In the wake of the ice age, the Isle of Man was covered with deciduous woodland, dominated by oak and elm. Those first human settlers left no visible remains, and the main evidence for their presence comes from scatters of flint tools and the waste products from making these. They were hunter-gatherers and lived directly off their environment, following shoals of fish or perhaps hunting wild birds, and gathering naturally occurring fruit.
Over eighty early Mesolithic sites are now known from the Island. This relatively high density, when compared with Britain or Ireland, suggests that the Isle of Man was an important population centre at this time. Some evidence for the lifestyle of these people comes from the fact that a number of the sites are coastal, and some contain large quantities of shellfish, indicating a reliance upon the sea as a resource for food. Another significant characteristic is the presence of quantities of hazelnuts, which also provide good radiocarbon dating evidence.
Around 4000 BC the hunter-gatherer lifestyle changed into something quite different. From this era we begin to find the first evidence for farming and a more settled existence, in what is termed the Neolithic period. The earlier part of this era (c. 4000 to 3000 BC) is notable for the construction of a series of megalithic tombs, which provided a focus both for burial and for ritual activity. A number of these sites survive on the Isle of Man and can be visited. Perhaps the best example, and certainly the most studied is the Meayll Circle near Cregneash. It consists of six T-shaped burial chambers radiating from a central axis, and in many respects is unique in the British Isles. Other examples include Cashtal yn Ard and King Orry’s Grave, and almost all of the Manx megalithic tombs occupy dominant locations with dramatic views of the horizon, sea and sky. During this era the Neolithic peoples undertook extensive clearance of the native woodlands of the Island and had begun the process of turning it into an agricultural landscape such as we see today. The earliest evidence of a permanent dwelling on the Isle of Man was found at Ronaldsway during runway excavation work, and this house is also a strong contender for the oldest permanent inhabited structure in the British Isles. The area presently occupied by the Island’s airport had long been recognised as also being, archaeologically, one of its most important sites.
During the later Neolithic period there is evidence to suggest that the people of the Isle of Man developed an identity quite distinct from that on either side of the Irish Sea. Much of this evidence, in the form of distinctively formed and decorated pottery, also comes from Ronaldsway, and the area gives its name to the so-called ‘Ronaldsway culture’. During this period the disposal of the dead took place mainly through cremation, and archaeological evidence would suggest that the chambered tombs of the earlier period continued to provide a focus for this. The Manx Bronze age began around 2000 BC, when new metalworking technology began to appear on the Island. The earlier part of this era, lasting until roughly 1500 BC, is characterised by the construction of barrows or cairns, of which as many as 400 have been identified in the Manx landscape. However only a few of these have been properly investigated archaeologically. The general form consists of a stone cist or box, into which either the body or its cremated remains (often in a ceramic vessel) were placed. Grave goods such as bone pins, flint tools and metalwork could also be included. The cist was then covered with an earth mound or a cairn of stones. Sometimes standing stones or quartz boulders were used to define the perimeter of the cairn. A good example of this is the Druid’s Circle at Orrisdale near Kirk Michael. Here a ring of stones form the edge of a burial mound, which antiquarian accounts record once contained a bronze age cremation urn. Today the mound presents a fairly low, overgrown appearance, having been partially eroded by farming activity in the nineteenth century. However, the presence of other mounds and stones in the vicinity – mostly now also altered or destroyed – suggests that this area may have had significance in prehistoric times as a funerary landscape. The name is misleading and seems to have been coined by Colonel Townley, an English diarist visiting the Isle of Man in the 1790s. At that time there was little understanding of prehistoric cultures, and any ancient monument was attributed to the Celts (the earliest inhabitants of the British Isles recorded in written sources) and their religious leaders, the Druids.
There are far fewer dramatic sites associated with the later Bronze Age. Perhaps the most significant is the hill fort and burial cairn on South Barrule, in the south of the Island. The cairn is located at the highest point on the hill, which is now marked by a modern Ordnance Survey triangulation pillar surrounded by an accompanying low wall. These modern features sit upon a low cairn comprised of tightly packed pieces of slate. The views from the summit are impressive, and the site was probably deliberately chosen, first, so that the dead could watch over the living, and second, to ensure that the monument was visible from most localities nearby, so that the living could see that they were being watched. Some time later a hill fort was constructed around it. This consists of a pair of roughly concentric earthworks, around 20 metres apart, surrounding the summit.
South Barrule, the most significant Bronze Age site on the Isle of Man
The outer rampart is the more impressive of the two, and is constructed largely of stone. This would have been transported up to the summit from the surrounding area, and also salvaged from the inner rampart (which must therefore be the earlier of the two). The outer rampart would originally have consisted of a stone wall several metres high, behind which a turf breastwork was constructed. There may also have been a ditch on the outside, indicating a considerable defensive feature. It was investigated by archaeologists in the 1970s, and a small area of excavated rampart has been left open in order to demonstrate the method of construction. The inner rampart once contained a collection of more than seventy roundhouses, of which one has been radiocarbon dated to around 500 BC – consistent with the late Bronze Age pottery found on the site. There has been much debate as to whether these structures were all inhabited, or whether some were storehouses for grain or livestock. Hill forts are generally considered to be responses to a threat from an external source; in the late Bronze Age there was certainly increasing competition for scarce resources, and evidence of warlike activity. For example, a skeleton from this era recovered from Ronaldsway was shown to have suffered a stab wound to his ribs inflicted with a bronze sword. Perhaps the fort was a means of protecting resources or people in times of threat. It may also have become the administrative centre or seat of power for the surrounding area. One of the principal archaeologists who investigated the South Barrule hill fort, Peter Gelling, wrote of it:
It is legitimate … to conclude that the fort was built by the native population of the Island, and is not necessarily an indication of invasion from outside. If so, it can still be asked why the fort was built at all. Perhaps one need only point to the quantities of very effective swords and spearheads which have come down to us from the late Bronze Age, and suggest that life was no more peaceful then than it was to be in the Iron Age. Yet one would have to admit that warfare is not considered to have been so endemic then as to induce people to live in so inhospitable a spot as the top of South Barrule.¹
Interestingly, in Manx folklore South Barrule is held to be the seat of Manannan MacLir, the sea-god who protects the Isle of Man. Even into the eighteenth century, rushes gathered at the bottom of the hill were brought to the summit in tribute to him on Midsummer’s Eve. Perhaps this was an echo of an earlier custom, in which tribute was made to a Bronze Age warlord or chieftain whose seat was within the fort.
From around 500 BC we begin to enter the Iron Age, though evidence for this period is somewhat sparse. Due to the acidic nature of Manx soils, few classic Iron Age objects survive, and sites from this era are rare. It is worth stating at this point that there was no Roman occupation of the Isle of Man. Though Roman coins have been found on the Island, their significance, and the degree of interaction between Roman Britain and the Isle of Man, remain matters of debate. The most significant landscape features from this period which survive today are a number of promontory forts, so named because an earth rampart and ditch close off a spit of land projecting out to sea, rather than encircling a hill top. A good example is Burroo Ned, overlooking the Sound, which is the largest such promontory fort on the Island. Here a collapsed embankment may be seen running roughly west-south-west to east-north-east, and this is all that survives of a once much more imposing structure, which may well have once been topped with a wooden fence or palisade. Inside the fort the remains of several roundhouses may sometimes be traced, especially in winter before the summer bracken obscures them. A field boundary to the north may follow the line of a second rampart. This and other promontory forts from this era, such as Cass ny Hawin and Close ny Chollagh, appear to have fallen out of use for several centuries, before being reoccupied during the Viking age.
During the Iron Age the people of the Isle of Man adopted Christianity, though the exact date and method by which this occurred are not clear. Some sources suggest links with the early Romano-British church, while there is also strong evidence for the influence of Irish Christianity associated with St Patrick. The structures most closely associated with this era are the keeills, small single-celled stone-built chapels, of which over 170 have been identified (of which around thirty-five exist in recognisable form above ground today). Very few have been investigated using modern archaeological means, so there are still many unanswered questions surrounding when they were constructed, how they were used, and indeed how they were roofed. The remote locations of many suggest an early form of Christianity in which priests or holy men lived as hermits, often under the patronage of local warlords and chieftains. The keeill which is believed to have existed on the Calf of Man would be a good example of this, and the spectacular Calf of Man crucifixion stone (one of the finest pieces of early Christian stonework in Europe) is believed to have been an altar frontal. It may be seen today in the Manx Museum in Douglas, along with numbers of other important carved stones. Two in particular carry an Ogham inscription and have been dated to the AD 600s. The similarities between these stones and those from the Irish midlands suggest settlement in (or at least contact with) that area. The presence of graves surrounding many keeill sites indicates that at least at certain times they had a communal role. Perhaps the best preserved example from the point of view of the visitor is Lag ny Keeilley. Here, the the site was extensively investigated in the early 1900s and revealed a rectangular stone structure (the keeill) enclosed within a roughly circular earth boundary. This is believed to represent the perimeter of the associated cemetery (or rhullick in Manx). A smaller stone structure has been interpreted as the priest’s cell or dwelling, while an adjacent level area may have permitted him to grow crops. Again, the site is a remote and isolated location, though the absence of any finds which conclusively date the structures make it difficult to say a great deal with certainty about when and how they were used.
In the later years of the ninth century, Viking raiders in the Irish Sea began to settle upon the Isle of Man. Their presence is confirmed by a number of burials, found mostly in the north of the Island. These pagan graves contrast sharply with those of the Christian Manx population in this era, in that they contain grave goods for use in