The Westbury or Bratton White Horse is the oldest of the Wiltshire chalk horses, and its origins are obscure. Another hillside chalk figure, the
Uffington White Horse, featured in King Alfred's early life, as he was born in the
Vale of White Horse, not far from
Uffington in
Oxfordshire. Unlike the recorded history of Westbury, documents as early as the eleventh century refer to the "White Horse Hill" at Uffington ("mons albi equi"), and archaeological work has dated the Uffington White Horse to the
Bronze Age, although it is not certain that it was originally intended to represent a horse. A white horse war standard was associated with the
continental Saxons in the
Dark Ages. In his 17th-century work
Monumenta Britannica,
John Aubrey connected the Uffington horse with Hengist and Horsa, stating that "the White Horse was their Standard at the Conquest of Britain". Aubrey, a Wiltshireman who studied the county's antiquities, mentions no chalk figures in Wiltshire; nor does
Bishop Edmund Gibson, who edited the Camden's
Britannia edition of 1695. This suggests at the earliest a late-seventeenth-century origin for the figure. A large map of Wiltshire by Andrews and Dury published in several sheets in 1773 shows a Westbury horse much the same as the present one, facing to the left, and with long legs. In both of
Richard Gough's editions of
William Camden's
Britannia, published in 1789 and 1806, he takes an interest in chalk horses. In his 1789 edition, he supports a connection between the Uffington horse and the
Battle of Ashdown. He also says he surveyed the Westbury horse in 1772 and gives this description of it: This gives a size smaller than the measurements of the present horse, and Gough mentions no design or features. He adds that he disagrees with Wise and sees this as undoubtedly a memorial to a victory of Alfred, comparing it with the horse at Uffington. There is a local view that the current white horse, facing to the left, was cut in 1778 by a Mr Gee, who overlaid a smaller, older chalk figure, believed also to have represented a horse. The basis for this other horse appears to be the Gough image of 1806. For him, it follows that if the "peculiar figure, so unlike any other known representation of the horse" existed, then it was "a deliberate fake, perhaps even a practical joke". It is argued by some commentators that the Westbury White Horse may have been created in the early 18th century as a symbol of loyalty to the new Protestant reigning house. == 19th century==