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Hereford's Ribbon has backing of government

1:00pm Thursday 4th September 2008

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HEREFORD’S Rotherwas Ribbon is worth preserving – and that’s official.

The government response to a petition started on the Prime Minister’s website to save it states the monument is a “significant find, worthy of being fully recorded for future research and of being protected in-situ”.

It continues to say that the interest generated by the discovery in 2007 of the neolithic site is a vivid testament to the value people attach to their cultural heritage.

“The government recognises this and remains committed to the principle that there should be a presumption in favour of the physical preservation of nationally important archaeological remains (whether scheduled or not) that are affected by proposed development,”

the statement reads.

“English Heritage is currently working with Herefordshire Council, and with the contractor’s advisors, Worcestershire Historic Environment and Archaeology Service, to ensure that a viable solution for the preservation of these fragile remains is being implemented.

“Over coming months, it is hoped that post-excavation analysis, together with further investigations in the vicinity of the Rotherwas Ribbon, will help to broaden understanding of its significance.”

The petition was started following the discovery of the monument that lay in the path of the Rotherwas access road. It stated that it was as important as Stonehenge and road building must stop immediately. It also called for a full public inquiry.

Since then the road has been completed, with the monument preserved under protective materials.

Three large scale excavations have been carried out in the area surrounding the road. The findings included a palaeochannel (a former water course) and a neolithic and bronze age settlement.

The water course offered valuable clues about early vegetation in the area, and soil, which included traces of pollen, was sent off for tests.

Traces of dandelion indicated that the land was cleared and there was evidence of cereals being grown.

And at the settlement, bits of cracked stone were found, giving evidence to claims that some of the earliest houses in Herefordshire were built in the area.


Your Say Your Herefordshire

aremach, Hereford says...
8:20am Fri 5 Sep 08

No-one was ever proposing the ribbon should be dug up and the bits flung around the place in some kind of war dance. But slicing it in two and covering it with concrete for an empty and unused cul-de-sac to is NOT preserving it for future generations - not by any stretch even of this council's imagination.

This report has come too late to save the ribbon in it's entirety, but it does create interesting questions about the suitability for development of all the triangle of land now enclosed by the Rotherwas cul-de-sac. If the report means anything, this land cannot now be developed. But no doubt the policy of cultural vandalism by this council will continue, missing again all the economic opportunities for local wealth creation that are presented by sensitive promotion of our local heritage through tourism.

G Banks, Herefordshire says...
2:12pm Sat 6 Sep 08

Surely the Government announcement said that the Ribbon should be protected in situ for future research, which is exactly what the Council and English Heritage did wasn't it. The Government seem to be supporting the council's actions. As I remember, the small number of Nimbys (using the Ribbon find as an opportunity to stop a road they did not want) were arguing that the Ribbon was kept uncovered for everyone to see, but this would have condemned it to have been destroyed by the elements. There is a lot of hypocrisy in the world but particularly in Hereford.

aremach, Hereford says...
9:30pm Tue 9 Sep 08

There is more inaccuracy than hypocrisy. G Banks' memory is at fault. No-one ever suggested the Ribbon should be kept uncovered and exposed to the elements and to suggest that they did is ridiculous (or just plain mischief making!)

A local architect came up with a plan to turn the road which had already been half built into an access road to a new visitor centre which would protect part of the Ribbon but allow visitors to see it. The rest of the Ribbon would have been attractively landscaped to protect it and make it's shape clearly visible, with waymarked walks and information points around the whole of this historic landscape.

Instead of which we have an empty road which the government said was poor value, costing local taxpayers dearly, so that the Council can expand the Rotherwas industrial estate instead of trying to fill half empty industrial land at Moreton and Leominster.

Finally, how dare G Banks suggest that anyone is not allowed to both oppose this ridiculous road AND wish to preserve our heritage. Surely one can have a view about more than one issue?

senua, Cardiff says...
11:28pm Wed 10 Sep 08

There were many people not from the area and who didn't know about the road they campaigned to have this monument saved. Once people around the country found out what was happening there was an out cry.
The road was rejected by the government so why did it go ahead. This council needs investigating.
A unique piece of archeology has been destroyed. Don't be fooled by the protected for future generations bit.
A road that wasn't needed and archeology destroyed is that the sort of legacy we wish to leave future generations.


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