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Legend Of Childe's Tomb Granite Cross Dartmoor Devon England 1930s Ad Trade Card

$ 1.44

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Condition: Used
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days

    Description

    Legend Of Childe's Tomb Granite Cross Dartmoor Devon England 1930s Ad Trade Card
    NOTE:
    THESE ARE NOT POSTCARDS
    THEY ARE TRADE/ADVERTISING CARDS.
    THEY ARE MUCH SMALLER THAN A STANDARD POSTCARD
    AND
    THERE IS ADVERTISING TEXT ON THE BACK!
    THE CARD DIMENSIONS ARE APPROXIMATELY
    2 5/8 '' x 1 3/8 ''  or  6.5 cm. x 3.5 cm.
    ORIGINAL 1930s  TRADE - ADVERTISING CARD
    BRITISH LEGENDS AND FAIRY TALES
    THE LEGEND OF CHILDE'S TOMB
    Dartmoor, Devonshire
    On a bleak height of Dartmoor are still to be found the stones of Childe's Tomb. Childe was Lord
    of the Manor of Plymstock. Lost and overcome by the snows of a blizzard, he slew his exhausted
    horse and, after using its blood to write on a granite slab: "The first that finds and brings me to my
    grave, The lands of Plymstock he shall have," he crept into the creature's body in a vain
    endeavour to save himself through its warmth. Tradition says that monks from Tavistock found
    him, and so gained the lands. It is thought, however, that the story has an earlier Saxon origin.
    Childe's Tomb is a granite cross on Dartmoor, Devon, England. Although not in its original form, it
    is more elaborate than most of the crosses on Dartmoor, being raised upon a constructed base,
    and it is known that a kistvaen is underneath.
    A well-known legend attached to the site, first recorded in 1630 by Tristram Risdon, concerns a
    wealthy hunter, Childe, who became lost in a snow storm and supposedly died there despite
    disembowelling his horse and climbing into its body for protection. The legend relates that Childe
    left a note of some sort saying that whoever found and buried his body would inherit his lands at
    Plymstock. After a race between the monks of Tavistock Abbey and the men of Plymstock, the
    Abbey won.
    The tomb was virtually destroyed in 1812 by a man who stole most of the stones to build a house
    nearby, but it was partly reconstructed in 1890
    NOTE:
    THE REVERSE SIDE HAS TEXT ABOUT THE IMAGE ON THE FRONT SIDE
    THE CARD DIMENSIONS ARE APPROXIMATELY
    2 5/8 '' x 1 3/8 ''  or  6.5 cm. x 3.5 cm.
    NOTE:
    THE IMAGES ABOVE ARE LARGER THAN THE CARD
    TO SHOW THE DETAIL.
    SEE IMAGES ABOVE!
    THIS CARD IS NOT A MODERN REPRODUCTION - IT IS AN ORIGINAL
    THERE MAY BE:
    PAPER LOSS - SMUDGING - BENT and/or ROUNDED CORNERS
    SEE IMAGES ABOVE!
    7
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