Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Kerris

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OS grid reference
  
SW443273

Country
  
England

Post town
  
PENZANCE

Local time
  
Sunday 2:05 PM

Civil parish
  
Paul, Cornwall

UK parliament constituency
  
St Ives

Region
  
South West

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Postcode district
  
TR19

Dialling code
  
01736

Ceremonial county
  
Cornwall

Unitary authority
  
Cornwall Council

Kerris

Weather
  
11°C, Wind NW at 37 km/h, 69% Humidity

Kerris (Cornish: Kerys) is a settlement in west Cornwall, England, United Kingdom at 50.0894°N 5.5757°W / 50.0894; -5.5757. It is three miles (5 km) southwest of Penzance in the civil parish of Paul. Kerris means "fort-place" in the Cornish language. Kerris has been a settlement for about two thousand years. Its oldest building, a former manor house, dates back to medieval times and there are two working farms in the settlement.

Contents

Map of Kerris, Penzance, UK

Antiquities

Several prehistoric relics can be found around Kerris including the Roundago (possibly an Iron Age hill fort) and the Kerris Standing Stone or menhir Several fields away is the Tresvannack Stone which stands around 3.5m tall with a further 1.2m below ground. In 1840 a pair of urns were found under a slab of granite at the base of the stone. The urns are now kept at Penlee Museum, Penzance. Kerris cross was damaged during the English Civil War and repaired by a local blacksmith in the 19th century with iron pins holding the granite head in position. In September 2011 the corroded pins were replaced by stainless steel pins. Medieval crosses, in situ, indicate the route to the parish church.

References

Kerris Wikipedia