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Standing stone 230m west of the Old Manor is a prehistoric monument located in Cornwall, England. The standing stone dates to the Bronze Age or earlier prehistoric period, representing a class of ritual or ceremonial monuments commonly erected across south-west England during this era. Such isolated standing stones often functioned as territorial markers, burial monuments, or focal points for ceremonial activity within the Bronze Age landscape. The monument survives as a substantial upright stone and forms part of Cornwall's significant corpus of prehistoric standing stones, contributing to understanding of ancient settlement patterns and ritual practice in the region.
Standing stone 230m west of the Old Manor is a scheduled monument protected by Historic England under reference 1004294. View the official record →
Standing stone 230m west of the Old Manor is a prehistoric monument located in Cornwall, England. It is designated a Scheduled Ancient Monument by Historic England (NHLE) under reference 1004294.
Standing stone 230m west of the Old Manor is a Scheduled Ancient Monument, legally protected by Historic England (NHLE) — the body responsible for designating and safeguarding heritage sites in England. The official designation reference is 1004294.
Several scheduled monuments lie within 10 km, including Trevescan Cross 340m SSW of Sennen Church (0.4 km), Wayside cross 170m north of Trevilley (0.9 km), Two barrows and circular enclosure on Pordenack Point (1.6 km).
Aubrey generates in-depth historical research for any address in Britain — drawing on scheduled monument data, Domesday records, Roman heritage, PAS finds and medieval history to reveal the complete story of a landscape.
Research the area around Standing stone 230m west of the Old Manor