: "Icknield Way", 1912. Used as the cover picture of "The Icknield Way Path – A Walkers' Guide" published by the Icknield Way Association in 2012 In many places the track consists or consisted of several routes, particularly as it passes along the line of the
escarpment of the
Chilterns, probably because of the seasonal usage, and possibly the amount of traffic especially of herds or flocks of livestock. To the west the track can be detected below the escarpments of the
Berkshire Downs. Near
Wantage, the route along the ridge of the Downs is known as
The Ridgeway, and the name
Icknield Way is applied to a parallel lowland route above the
spring line at the northern edge of the chalk. Many modern roads follow the Icknield Way, such as the B489 from
Aston Clinton to Dunstable and the
A505 from
Baldock to
Royston. In some places, especially from the east of
Luton in Bedfordshire to
Ickleford (so named from the Way crossing a stream) near
Hitchin in Hertfordshire, the route is followed by minor roads, and is not distinguishable at all in many places, except by landscape features such as
barrows and mounds which line the route, and indentation presumably from ancient and frequent use. It could be described as a belt studded with archaeological sites found at irregular intervals. The Icknield Way used to form part of the boundary between Hertfordshire and Cambridgeshire, and at one time
Royston was cut in two by this boundary. Royston is where the Icknield Way crosses
Ermine Street. In the south-west some writers take the Way to
Exeter, while others only take it as far as Salisbury. To the north-east,
Icklingham, Suffolk, and
Caistor-by-Norwich,
Yarmouth and
Hunstanton, Norfolk, have all been proposed as the destination. In support of the western route, a road at
Dersingham near Hunstanton was named
Ykenildestrethe and
Ikelynge Street in the 13th century. ==Modern paths==