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If Google Street View is available, the image is from the best available vantage point looking, if possible, towards the location of the monument. Where it is not available, the satellite view is shown instead.
Latitude: 54.3754 / 54°22'31"N
Longitude: -1.0673 / 1°4'2"W
OS Eastings: 460686.138868
OS Northings: 498171.851363
OS Grid: SE606981
Mapcode National: GBR NKZV.Q9
Mapcode Global: WHF95.K9Z1
Entry Name: Wayside cross known as Stump Cross on Bransdale Ridge
Scheduled Date: 10 November 1994
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1010347
English Heritage Legacy ID: 25567
County: North Yorkshire
Civil Parish: Bransdale
Traditional County: Yorkshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): North Yorkshire
Church of England Parish: Kirkbymoorside All Saints
Church of England Diocese: York
The monument includes the base and part of the shaft of a wayside cross.
The base is 0.6m by 0.6m in plan and stands 0.85m high. A section of the shaft
0.45m long stands loosely in the socket in the base stone. The shaft fragment
is badly eroded on the northern side.
This cross stands at the junction of a number of trackways crossing the moors.
It served as a route marker as well as a religious symbol offering spiritual
succour to travellers. Crosses provide evidence of the complex network of
communications in the medieval period.
MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.
It includes a 2 metre boundary around the archaeological features,
considered to be essential for the monument's support and preservation.
Source: Historic England
Wayside crosses are one of several types of Christian cross erected during the
medieval period, mostly from the 9th to 15th centuries AD. In addition to
serving the function of reiterating and reinforcing the Christian faith
amongst those who passed the cross and of reassuring the traveller, wayside
crosses often fulfilled a role as waymarkers, especially in difficult and
otherwise unmarked terrain. The crosses might be on regularly used routes
linking ordinary settlements or on routes having a more specifically religious
function, including those providing access to religious sites for parishioners
and funeral processions, or marking long-distance routes frequented on
pilgrimages.
Over 350 wayside crosses are known nationally, concentrated in south west
England throughout Cornwall and on Dartmoor where they form the commonest type
of stone cross. A small group also occurs on the North York Moors. Relatively
few examples have been recorded elsewhere and these are generally confined to
remote moorland locations.
Outside Cornwall almost all wayside crosses take the form of a `Latin' cross,
in which the cross-head itself is shaped within the projecting arms of an
unenclosed cross. In Cornwall wayside crosses vary considerably in form and
decoration. The commonest type includes a round, or `wheel', head on the faces
of which various forms of cross or related designs were carved in relief or
incised, the spaces between the cross arms possibly pierced. The design was
sometimes supplemented with a relief figure of Christ and the shaft might bear
decorative panels and motifs. Less common forms in Cornwall include the
`Latin' cross and, much rarer, the simple slab with a low relief cross on both
faces. Rare examples of wheel-head and slab-form crosses also occur within the
North York Moors group. Most wayside crosses have either a simple socketed
base or show no evidence for a separate base at all.
Wayside crosses contribute significantly to our understanding of medieval
religious customs and sculptural traditions and to our knowledge of medieval
routeways and settlement patterns. All wayside crosses which survive as earth-
fast monuments, except those which are extremely damaged and removed from
their original locations, are considered worthy of protection.
This cross stands at the junction of several trackways crossing the moors. It
is one of a group of crosses on the North York Moors defining and illustrating
medieval routeways, and as such provides important insight into medieval
communication and settlement in North Yorkshire
Source: Historic England
Books and journals
Graham, L, M, , 'The Crosses of the North York Moors' in The Crosses of the North York Moors, (1993)
Source: Historic England
Other nearby scheduled monuments