Perran Round
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Perran Round (also known as St Piran's Round) is an amphitheatre in the hamlet of Rose, midway between the villages of Goonhavern and Perranporth, Cornwall, UK. It is described as the best surviving example of a plen-an-gwary, a medieval amphitheatre used for performing the Ordinalia, or Cornish miracle plays,[1] and Cornish wrestling tournaments.[2]
Perran Round (grid reference SW778545) is on B3285 road between the mid-Cornwall villages of Goonhavern and Perranporth, in the parish of Perranzabuloe. The hamlets of Rose and Lower Rose are to the north-east and the round is surrounded by agricultural land. Between the round and the coast, 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) to the north is the Penhale Sands, sand dune system with the buried remains of the 6th-century St Piran's Oratory (grid reference SW768563) and a later church (now known as St Piran's Old Church, grid reference SW772564).[3] Both were abandoned by encroaching sand.
History
Condition of the monument
The diameter of the interior is about 45 metres (148 ft) and the circular earth rampart is around 3 metres (9.8 ft) high. The top of the rampart is flat and about 2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in) wide. The 2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in) ditch is continuous around the outside except for a causeway 4.5 metres (15 ft) wide at the southern entrance.
In the 1960s the round was once again neglected with the southern entrance waterlogged and the round covered in scrub. In 1967 Cornwall County Council raised the level of the forecourt and paved the entrance to improve drainage as well as some scrub clearing and reseeding. Following the management work, Perranzabuloe Parish Council leased the site and in 1884–85 there was further scrub clearance and the fence replaced. Rose Community Association and later Rose Men's Institute took over the management until 1995. The following year Cornwall Wildlife Trust undertook an ecological assessment and the British Trust for Conservation Volunteers cleared scrub from the outer face of the banks and the ditch. The Cornwall Heritage Trust now had the lease but did not maintain the site and in 2002, English Heritage handed the site to the current leaseholders, St Piran's Trust.[12]