White Horse Hill Towards the west, above
Uffington, the hills reach a culminating point of 261 m (856 ft) in White Horse Hill. In its northern flank, just below the summit, a gigantic
figure of a horse is cut, consisting of deep trenches filled with crushed white chalk. This figure gives name to the hill, the range and the Vale. It is 114 m (374 ft) long and highly stylised, the neck, body and tail varying little in width. The origin of the figure is unknown. Tradition asserted it to be the monument of a victory over the
Danes by
King Alfred, who was born at Wantage, but the site of the
Battle of Ashdown (871
CE) has been variously located. Moreover, the figure has been dated to the Bronze Age, so it pre-dates the battle by many centuries. Many ancient remains occur in the vicinity of the Horse. , as seen from an altitude of about 600 m (2000 ft), from the cockpit of a
glider On the summit of the hill there is an extensive and well-preserved circular camp, apparently used by the Romans but of much earlier origin. It is an Iron Age
hill fort named
Uffington Castle, after the village in the vale below. Within a short distance are
Hardwell Castle, a near-square work and, on the southern slope of the hills near
Ashdown House, a small camp traditionally called
Alfred's Castle. Further to the West, there is
Liddington Castle. A smooth, steep gully on the north flank of White Horse Hill is called the Manger, and to the west of it rises a bald mound named
Dragon Hill, the traditional scene of
St George's
victory over the
dragon, the blood of which made the ground bare of grass for ever. But the name may derive from
Celtic
Pendragon ("dragon's head"), which was a title for a king, and may point to an early place of burial. The Vale as a whole appears at the beginning of ''
Tom Brown's Schooldays'', as the scene of innocent Saxon boyhood adventures, before the eponymous hero is sent away to school at
Rugby.
Rosemary Sutcliff's 1977 historical novel
Sun Horse, Moon Horse takes place in the Vale, telling the tale of the White Horse's creation in
ancient Celtic times.
Waylands Smithy To the west of White Horse Hill lies a
long barrow called
Wayland's Smithy, said to be the home of a
smith who was never seen, but who shod the horses of travellers if they were left at the place with payment. The legend is elaborated, and the smith appears as a character, in
Sir Walter Scott's novel
Kenilworth, and in
Rudyard Kipling's ''
Puck of Pook's Hill''. ==The Ridgeway==