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Cornwall
There were not many people here in the early Stone Age, but a drift
across the land bridge from Europe brought settlers to Cornwall. The
first stone tools found date from about 4500BC. There is the remains of
a stone age settlement at Carn Brea near Redruth.
The name "Cornwall" comes from Cornovii, meaning hill dwellers, and Waelas,
meaning strangers There also exists many burial chambers from this
period. Most of these have been damaged by weather or by man, but you
can still see good example[le at Trethevy Quoit near St Cleer,
Liskeard, and another at Chun Cromlech near Land's End
Bronze Age in Cornwall
Around
2500BC a trade started growing in tin and copper to foreign shores. The
traders brought Bronze tools and gold ornaments to exchange for the
minerals. The remains of such Bronze Age villages can still be seen on
Bodmin Moor and the West Penwith Uplands. Excavations have shown these
peoples to be well organised, living in villages and practicing farming
and metalworking.
The Celts in Cornwall
Around
1000 BC a near group of warrior like settlers arrived in Cornwall from
Europe, these were the Celts. They brought with them knowledge of
forging iron into weapons. These Celts are the ancestors of modern
Cornwall. They lived in villages, farmed, mined for tin, copper, bronze
and iron, smelted and worked the metal. The best known of their Iron
Age settlements is at Chysauster, near Penzance. Here the low stone
walls, the grinding stones and the fireplaces still remain. Most of
their settlements were fortified against attack - hence many were on
hilltops or on promontories that could be easily defended. Hence the
word "Car" or "Caer" in Cornish place name from the Celtic "ker"
meaning fort., and "Dinas" meaning hill.
Roman times in Cornwall
The
Romans landed in Britain in 55BC, but they had very little influence in
Cornwall. The last major Roman settlement in the west was at Exeter.The
Tamar, the wild moors of Dartmoor, Exmoor and Bodmin Moor, plus the
lack of safe ports effectively kept the Romans at bay. And the Roman
presence kept other raiders way. The Cornish Celts were left much to
themselves.
Middle Ages in Cornwall
When
the Romans abandoned Britain, Cornwall came under Saxon influence, and
following the Norman conquest, the first real integration of Cornwall
into Britain took place. The whole of Cornwall was given to William's
half brother, Robert. He made his headquarters at Launceston, where he
built the castle to enforce his rule. Then for the next few hundred
years Cornwall was rule by a succession of relatives of the Norman and
Plantagenet kings.
The first Duke of Cornwall was Edward, the
Black Prince, son of Edward III. Then there was a succession of
rebellions through the middle ages. 1497, Perkin Warbeck landed near
Sennan , claiming to be one of the Princes murdered in the tower, he
was defeated in battle at Exeter. The Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549
against te imposition of the English Prayer book, saw many Cornishmen
executed. There was the Spanish invasion at Mounts Bay in 1595.The
Civil War between 1642-1649 led to a number of battles and sieges in
Cornwall. And in 1685 there was the Monmouth Rebellion with its bloody
aftermath.
Georgian & Victorian Age in Cornwall
The
invention of the steam engine in the 18th century and its rapid
development in the 19th, led to revolutional advances in mining.
Engines could pump dry mines at a great depth, they could haul up ore
and on the surface could perform many of the jobs
that previously had to be done by hand.. The Cornishman, Richard
Trevithick, was one of the leaders in steam engine development. Mines
were sunk deeper, ports had to be developed to get the ore out, and
there was plenty of employment available in the mines. But by the
middle of the 19th century vast deposits of tin and copper ore were
found abroad, and deep, expense Cornish mines became uncompetitive.
Cornish mines started a long downhill decline, and the last mines have
now closed.
The permanent legacy is the Cornish
communities that prospered in other countries, as many Cornish miners
emigrated to take their mining skills to Australia, North and South
America and South Africa. In Cornwall all that remains are the ruined
engine houses with their massive granite walls and high brick chiminies
Modern Times in Cornwall
Mining
has finished, the fish stocks are not what the were, Cornwall has
little industry, but it has its scenery and the best climate in
Britain. Miles of sandy beaches, coastal walks, open moorland and a benign climate that sees spring arriving early, and autumn lingering longer. Hence
tourism is the mainstay of the Cornish economy. As Cornwall tries hard
to capitalise on it's geography, it is striving to attract visitors
here all year round.

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