| Westbury White Horse |
A conventional looking horse it measures 107 feet tall and 175 feet across. The horse sits below Bratton Hill Iron Age fort. The hillfort has a Bronze Age barrow within its fortifications suggesting an earlier heritage.
The present design was completed in 1778 when it was re-cut from an older version by the Steward of Lord Abingdon, a man called Gee. Apparently the older design was more stylised with a crescent moon on the end of its long thin tail. The original horse was also facing the other direction.
According to local legend King Alfred cut the horse to celebrate the defeat of the Danes at the battle of Ethandus in AD 878. There is no way of verifying this legend and there is a possibility the original was older perhaps relating to the Iron Age hillfort.
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| Map ref: ST 900 516 |
| Directions: The site can be reached from a minor road from the B3098. |
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| Cley Hill |
Cley hill has a Devil legend attached to it. The Devil was travelling from Somerset carrying a huge sack of earth, with which he intended to bury the town of Devises. The people of the town had offended him in some way probably by converting to Christianity.
On his way to the town he passed an old man and asked him how far it was to the town. The old man looked at the huge sack of earth on the Devil's back, and guessed his intentions. He told the Devil that he had been on his way to the town for years, and that his hair had turned grey during his long search. On hearing this the Devil lost heart and dropped the soil where he stood forming the hill.
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