Clennell Street ia a truly ancient trackway through the Cheviot hills and ultimately connects Morpeth and Kelso.
It is reward enough to walk from the Northumbrian village of Alwinton and head north along (or more accurately up, as you will soon realise...) Clennell Street to simply enjoy the wide open spaces and vistas of the high hills. However you will be walking through some of the richest evidence of the past in the area.
These pages take a brief look at the archaeology you will encounter in the first three kilometers of your walk. They also provide an excuse for frequent stops as you ascend!
The street was once called 'Ermspeth' which is an Old English or Anglo-Saxon name meaning 'Eagle's Path'. The droving of cattle along paths such as this only died out in the post mediaeval period. These droveways are commonly cut by cross dykes whose real purpose is not known.
It is thought that they may be a means of controlling the movement of cattle, imposing some sort of toll on those using the track or possibly a way of marking territorial limits. Three of these are evident as marked on the chart. It is interesting that the dykes are associated with the settlements at Uplaw South, Hosedon Linn and Uplaw Knowe suggesting a relationship with them.
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