Dorsetshire Gap

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Bridleway heading NW from the Dorsetshire Gap
New signpost at the Dorsetshire Gap

The Dorsetshire Gap, also called the Dorset Gap, is an important, historic track junction - once the hub of central Dorset: it is today a well known beauty spot and magnet for ramblers.

The gap is located on the northern slopes of Lyscombe Hill and not far from the village of Melcombe Bingham, eight miles west-northwest of Bere Regis.[1]

Geography

Five ancient tracks, now bridleways, with steep, narrow, man-made cuttings, meet at the Dorsetshire Gap at the edge of the Higher Melcombe estate. The Gap was an important road crossing from the Middle Ages until the 19th century, linking the trails of the Ridgeway with the drove roads to the north. Travellers may originally have taken advantage of slight dips in the hillside to cross over the pass (mainly from north-west to south-east) and, over the centuries, these paths became worn into deep gullies.[2]

All around this site is evidence of prehistoric and mediæval settlement: hilltop cross dykes, barrows and traces of an incomplete Iron Age hill fort at Nettlecombe Tout and the remnants of a mediæval settlement in the valley below.

Hiking

The Dorsetshire Gap is on the Wessex Ridgeway between Iwerne Courtney and Sydling St Nicholas.

References

  1. The Dorsetshire Gap at www.themodernantiquarian.com. Accessed on 28 Mar 2013.
  2. Quinlan, Ray (2003).
  • 'The Greater Ridgeway' (Cicerone), p. 48, ISBN 978-1-84965-014-4
  • The Dorsetshire Gap: The Dorset Rambler