The Undercliff
The famous area of natural beauty known as the Undercliff is
situated at the southern tip of the Isle of Wight, extending for a
distance of about seven miles from Luccombe in the east to Blackgang
in the west. The cliff, about 200 feet high, stands from a quarter to
half a mile inland, and is dominated by Niton Down, 780 feet high, and
St. Boniface Down, 787 feet above Ventnor and Bonchurch, the highest
down on the Island. The formation of the cliff seems to be the result
of a series of landslips which occurred after the Island separated
from mainland Britain (about 7000 B.C.). These landslips have
continued down to the present day, the most notable in modern times
taking place between Niton and Blackgang in 1928.
Early Historical
References
The earliest reference to the Undercliff is recorded in 1201 (John),
naming the area as the "Underwath" or "Underway."
From the same period a charter of Aiwarie de Newton grants lands "sub
falasia" (under the cliffs) at Niton. "Underwath" again
appears in a charter of William of Devon, Lord of the Isle of Wight,
giving tithes to the monks of Lyra Abbey (Normandy) from Wrockshale
(Wroxall) and the Underwath. A Roll of 1327 (Edward III) designates "Wathe"
to mean the land below the cliff from Bonchurch in the east to Niton
in the west, and it names, in a Feudal Aid account, Robert de Merable
of Mirables, Niton, and Willo de Holeway (Modern Ventnor), a manor
next to Bonchurch. Lastly a document of 1431 (Henry VI) names
Raduiphus Dynelay as having a free tenement in "Suthwaite"
under the cliffs.
Pre-Norman
Relics of Old Stone Age (Palaeolithic) Man have been found in the
Undercliff, most notably two hand axes found at Ventnor and presently
displayed at the Heritage Centre. New Stone Age (Neolithic) Man was
present in the area as illustrated by flint implements found on the
downs at Niton and pottery fragments discovered on the southern end of
Niton Down in a burial mound. Other discoveries of a flint spear head
at Ventnor, an axe head at Upper Ventnor, and a flint flake in
Bonchurch landslip confirm the Neolithic presence.
Further evidence of human occupation of this period comes from the
number of middens found in Bonchurch, Ventnor, Steephill and St.
Lawrence. These contain pieces of crude pottery, animal remains, and
large collections of sea shells which give a clue to the kind of diet
eaten by these inhabitants.
Bronze Age Cira.
1800 - 500 BC
A more advanced civilization moved into the area with a knowledge of
metal and which cremated its dead, placing the ashes in urns in
circular mounds. Some of these mounds can still be seen on Niton, Week
and Rew Downs.
Extensive finds from the Bronze Age period have been made at
Ventnor. The Steephill district particularly has yielded up a more
sophisticated type of pottery than that of Neolithic times. Also found
were thirty socketed bronze axe heads thought to date between the 5th
and 7th Centuries B.C. In addition there are the usual bone, shell and
fragment remains from kitchen middens.
During the excavations for the new road from Niton to Chale in 1931,
the remains of a Bronze Age hut were found on Gore Down, and pottery
shards found there suggest a date of about 800 B.C. An urn containing
burnt bones, dating from about 1100 B.C., was discovered on Head Down
just to the north of Niton.
Iron Age Circa. 3rd
Century BC to Roman Times
The later Celts came into Britain from Gaul and brought with them
the ability to work in iron. They usually buried their dead and a
skeleton from this period was found at St. Lawrence in 1921. Two finds
at Steephill just before World War Two yielded a single male skeleton,
and the skeletons of a woman and child buried together. These were
dated by fragments of pottery found with the bodies. Iron nails were
also excavated in a quarry at Steephill.
There is a mass of evidence of the occupation of the area just prior
to the Roman invasion to be found in the large number of kitchen
middens discovered near streams between Ventnor and Niton. They
indicate a diet of meat and sea food with the dating of the middens
being confirmed by fragments of bowls and cooking pots found there.
These people would have been living in the area when the Romans moved
in to occupy the Island in the First Century A.D.
The Romans 1st to
5th AD
Roman villa remains have been found in the Isle of Wight, most
notably at Newport and Brading, but no remains of Roman buildings have
been found in the Undercliff area, although there are theories in
favour of a Roman camp at Bonchurch. However, the supposed site near
the Old Church has disappeared in cliff falls, and no evidence has yet
come to light to support these theories.
Some extensive Roman period finds have been made, including urns
containing burnt bones in Bonchurch; a bronze bracelet (c.300 A.D,)
found on the arm of a skeleton in Belgrave Road, Ventnor, and coins at
both entrances of St. Boniface Tunnel; in Grove Road and Gills Cliff
Road, Ventnor; on the shore at Binnel Bay, Niton, and on Shanklin
Down, near Luccombe. Pottery fragments have also been discovered in
Madeira Vale and Steephill, Ventnor.
It appears, therefore, that although there was considerable Roman or
Romano-British activity in the Undercliff, most people were living in
the Iron Age type of settlement rather than the more substantial Roman
style buildings.
Saxons & Vikings
6th Century to 1066
It is reasonable to assume that the shores of the Island were raided
by Saxon pirates during the later Roman period, but there is little
evidence of Saxon occupation of the Undercliff after the Romans left.
The Saxons conquered the Isle of Wight in the mid-6th century, but the
only indication of their being on the southern tip of the Island,
apart from a single coin found between Ventnor and Shanklin, is from
burials and place names. Entire skeletons have been found in graves
covered by heaps of stones, and a large grave containing a single
skeleton was discovered near the road from Ventnor to Wroxall. Saxon
place names occur at Wroxall, Niton, Stenbury, Appuldurcombe,
Nettlecombe and Luccombe, although the last three could well have been
earlier Celtic names.
The Viking conquest occurred in the 10th century, but again their
presence in the Undercliff is not backed up by real evidence. However,
Whitehead suggests that the name Ventnor has part of its origin in the
Danish 'or' meaning a shore or stretch of sand. |