A labyrinth carving near Tintagel Castle on the north Cornwall coast — legendary birthplace of King Arthur, where Geoffrey of Monmouth placed Uther Pendragon's seduction of Igraine. The Rocky Valley labyrinths nearby, carved into a cliff face above a waterfall, are among the most famous labyrinth sites in Britain, though their date remains disputed (Bronze Age to early medieval). Tintagel's dramatic headland, connected to the mainland by a narrow bridge, embodies the labyrinth's symbolism as threshold between worlds. At Giza bearing 318.05°, 3,755 km from the Great Pyramid.
WikipediaLabyrinth Details
Pattern
Classical 7-Circuit
Circuits
7 paths, 8 walls
Material
rock_carving
Age
Unknown
Condition
intact
Country
England
Region
Cornwall
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid