of Shropshire Clent appears in the
Domesday Book as "Klinter", and may be derived from the old Scandinavian word
klint for a cliff. Once part of a
Mercian forest, the hills contain the remains of a multi-vallate,
Iron Age hillfort on Wychbury Hill. According to local historian John Amphlett, a battle between ancient
Britons and
Romans was fought on Clent Heath. The Clent Hills are graced with several classically inspired architectural works from about the 1750s. Most of them are in the private grounds of
Hagley Hall but most of them are visible from public areas.
Lord Lyttelton of Hagley Hall constructed the
Wychbury Obelisk on Wychbury Hill in 1758, which is visible for many miles, even from the
Clee Hills. Lord Lyttelton also had constructed many other
follies including a Temple of
Theseus, other small
Greek and
Roman temples, a
full sized ruined mock castle (his lands did not contain a real one) and
The Four Stones on top of Clent Hill. The Clent Hills are also well known for their role in the
legend of
St. Kenelm, who was murdered on a hunting trip at the north eastern slopes of Clent Hill in 821 AD. The church of St. Kenelm in the parish of
Romsley marks the site of his murder. The church is the starting point of the walk
St Kenelm's Trail. One source of the
River Stour is within the grounds of St. Kenelm's church. The summits of the two largest hills,
Clent Hill and
Walton Hill are now the property of the
National Trust. Clent Hill Common was managed by a Board of Conservators from 1881 to 1959. Walton Hill Common became regulated
common land (under Commons Act 1899) in 1935. Both commons and the woodlands between them were given by
Worcestershire County Council and
Bromsgrove Rural District Council to the
National Trust in 1959. Both hills were then managed by a Management Committee of the National Trust until 1974, when the committee became advisory only. Both the Conservators and Management Committee were largely funded by contributions from neighbouring local authorities, particularly in the
Black Country. In 1974, the hills became a
country park, managed by Hereford & Worcester County Council under the
Countryside Act 1968. In 1995, management reverted to the National Trust, which set up a new advisory committee in 2000.
Beacons In 1588 a beacon was placed on the Bicknall as part of the chain set up to warn of the approach of the
Spanish Armada. For Queen Victoria's
Diamond Jubilee,
A. E. Housman watched the beacons from summit of Walton Hill. He wrote in a letter to his mother that at 10 o'clock on the night of 22 June 1897 (the hour designated for the event) he could see 52 just to the south and west. He did not try to count those northwards because "it was hard to tell the beacons from the ordinary illuminations of the Black Country". The one on the Malvern Hills was so large that during the day it had been visible from Walton Hill, and as it was saturated with paraffin it burned very brightly but only for an hour. By 2 o'clock, Housman wrote that in the distance two could still be seen still burning somewhere near the
Brown Clee, and three nearer, one towards
Droitwich, one on
Kinver Edge (it continued to burnt brightly until dawn), and the Clent Hill beacon which was not near the summit but on the south west face. ==View==