The Guardian - World News
| Title | And did those feet in ancient time: walking Britain’s oldest paths | Source | The Guardian - World News |
| Description |
There are few places where history can be felt more powerfully than these pathways, walked by explorer, author and TV presenter Nicholas Crane How often do you look down and wonder who created the path your feet are following? Or ask the cause of its curves and dips? Formed over thousands of years, paths form an “internet of feet” – a web of bridleways and hollow ways, drove roads and ridgeways, coffin tracks, pilgrimage trails and city pavements. Whether you’re hiking a National Trail or pottering along a National Trust footpath, there’s a good chance you’re following ancestral steps. It’s thoughts like these that led me on a journey to track the evolution of British paths for my book, The Path More Travelled. Eleven thousand years ago ice age hunter-gatherers arrived from Europe’s heartlands, moving through the wilderness along broad “routeways”, that later widened to tracks when horses and then wheels were adopted in the bronze age. For more than 2,000 years, traffic moved no faster than the speed of a horse, until the internal combustion engine drove pedestrians off the road just over a century ago. Continue reading... |
||
| Link | https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2026/may/14/walking-britain-ancient-paths-nicholas-crane | Published At | 2026-05-14 01:00:17 (18 hours ago) |
| Created At | 2026-05-14 02:18:18 | Updated At | 2026-05-14 02:18:18 |