Watership Down, Hampshire

Photograph of Watership Down
Watership Down, seen from the northeast

Watership Down is a hill, or down, at Ecchinswell in the civil parish of Ecchinswell, Sydmonton and Bishops Green in the English county of Hampshire. It rises fairly steeply on its northern flank (the scarp side), but to the south the slope is much gentler (the dip side). grid reference SU497570.

The Down is best known as the setting for Richard Adams' 1972 novel[1] about rabbits, also called Watership Down. The area is popular with cyclists and walkers. A bridleway, the Wayfarer's Walk cross county footpath, runs along the ridge of the Down which lies at the south-eastern edge of the North Wessex Downs Area of Natural Beauty. Other nearby features include Ladle Hill, on Great Litchfield Down, immediately to the west. Part of the hill is a 10.37 hectares (25.6 acres) biological SSSI, first notified in 1978. The hill has a partially completed Iron Age hill fort on its summit, and the surrounding area is rich in Iron Age tumuli, enclosures, lynchets and field systems. Further to the west lies Beacon Hill.

Watership Down is accessible via the large village of Kingsclere.

References

  1. "Watership Down". Worldcat. 1972. Retrieved 20 March 2016.

External links

Media related to Watership Down at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 51°18′36″N 1°17′18″W / 51.30995°N 1.28836°W / 51.30995; -1.28836

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.