PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • St Michael's Mount
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  • St Michael's Mount (, meaning "grey rock in the woods", also known colloquially by locals as simply the Mount) is a tidal island off the Mount's Bay coast of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is a civil parish and is united with the town of Marazion by a man-made causeway of granite setts, passable between mid-tide and low water. In prehistoric times, St Michael's Mount may have been a port for the tin trade, and Gavin de Beer made a case for it to be identified with the "tin port" Ictis/Ictin mentioned by Posidonius.
owl:sameAs
postcode area
  • TR
dcterms:subject
foaf:homepage
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
post town
  • MARAZION
dial code
  • 1736
postcode district
  • TR17
Country
  • England
area total sq mi
  • 0.090000
cornish name
  • Karrek Loos yn Koos
unitary england
Region
  • South West England
lieutenancy england
  • Cornwall
os grid reference
  • SW514298
constituency westminster
  • St Ives
civil parish
  • St Michael's Mount
static image
  • 250
Latitude
  • 50.116000
Official Name
  • St Michael's Mount
Website
static image caption
  • St Michael's Mount
Longitude
  • -5.477200
abstract
  • St Michael's Mount (, meaning "grey rock in the woods", also known colloquially by locals as simply the Mount) is a tidal island off the Mount's Bay coast of Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. It is a civil parish and is united with the town of Marazion by a man-made causeway of granite setts, passable between mid-tide and low water. The island has a mix of slate and granite (see Geology below). Its Cornish language name – literally, "the grey rock in the wood" — may represent a folk memory of a time before Mount's Bay was flooded. Certainly, the Cornish name would be an accurate description of the Mount set in woodland. Remains of trees have been seen at low tides following storms on the beach at Perranuthnoe, but radiocarbon dating established the submerging of the hazel wood at about 1700 BC. The chronicler John of Worcester relates under the year 1099 that St. Michael's Mount was located five or six miles (10 km) from the sea, enclosed in a thick wood, but that on the third day of the nones of November the sea overflowed the land, destroying many towns and drowning many people as well as innumerable oxen and sheep; the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records under the date 11 November 1099, "The sea-flood sprung up to such a height, and did so much harm, as no man remembered that it ever did before". The Cornish legend of Lyonesse, an ancient kingdom said to have extended from Penwith toward the Isles of Scilly, also talks of land being inundated by the sea. In prehistoric times, St Michael's Mount may have been a port for the tin trade, and Gavin de Beer made a case for it to be identified with the "tin port" Ictis/Ictin mentioned by Posidonius. Historically, St Michael's Mount was a Cornish counterpart of Mont Saint-Michel in Normandy, France (which shares the same tidal island characteristics and the same conical shape), when it was given to the Benedictines, religious order of Mont Saint-Michel, by Edward the Confessor in the 11th century. St Michael's Mount is one of 43 (unbridged) tidal islands which can be walked to from mainland Britain.