Wantsum Channel

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The Wantsum Channel is the name given to a now silted-up watercourse separating the Isle of Thanet and what was the mainland of the English county of Kent. The "river" Wantsum is now little more than a drainage ditch lying between Reculver and the River Stour.

[edit] History

A general map showing late Roman Kent. The Wantsum Channel lay between the Isle of Thanet and the British mainland, in the north eastern corner of Kent (note that "Regulbium" (Reculver) is marked here as "Reculbium")
A general map showing late Roman Kent. The Wantsum Channel lay between the Isle of Thanet and the British mainland, in the north eastern corner of Kent (note that "Regulbium" (Reculver) is marked here as "Reculbium")

From prehistory until the Middle Ages, the Channel was joined by the River Stour, which entered it at Stourmouth about midway along its length; it was a two-mile-wide (3.2km) strait. The southern end of the channel met the sea at Richborough (Roman name, Rutupiae), near Sandwich, the northern end being at Reculver (Latin Regulbium). That the Romans chose both sites for forts indicates the significance of the route, which their shipping commonly used to travel between London and the continent; and which Vikings used to raid Canterbury in 839.

Deposition of shingle at Stonar, at the southern end of the Channel, gradually caused it to silt up; and shipping heading for Canterbury, using the northern entrance, brought Fordwich into prominence as its outport. The silting up continued, particularly during the 12th and 13th centuries, when Augustinian monks entered into land reclamation; eventually by the 16th century, the Wantsum Channel had dried up, apart from the large drainage ditch down the centre of the erstwhile channel, and its feeder ditches: the wider channelis often referred to as the River Wantsum. However, that is only the northern section for, where the River Stour formally emptied into the Channel and now joined the Wantsum, it turned to the south, so that part of the Channel is now the river.

Efforts made by the monks of Minster-in-Thanet to manage the Wantsum in the Middle Ages are reflected in two names for parts of the old Channel, Abbot's Wall, and Monk's Wall. During the 18th century, silting threatened the rich port of Sandwich and efforts were made to create sluices and channels to control the waters. These ultimately failed, and as a result Sandwich is now some distance from the sea. In time, coastal erosion washed away most of the fort at Reculver, though parts of the western wall can still be seen close to the church towers. This church was founded in about 669 AD, long after the Romans had departed, the two towers being added in the 12th century. By the time Reculver church was built, the northern outlet of the Wantsum had become known as the "river Yenlade".[1] The church was demolished in the early 19th century, leaving just the towers as an aid to shipping. The towers and the remains of the fort are essential viewing for the tourist.

Some information used in this article is partly taken from the Kentish Stour Countryside Project notes on "The 'Life and Times of the Wantsum Channel" [2]

The North Sea flood of 1953 had the effect of making the Isle of Thanet an island again, if only for a few days.

The Wantsum Channel is part of three walks: the Wantsum Walk, the Saxon Shore Way and the Stour Valley Walk.

[edit] References

River Stour in Kent
and tributaries

River East StourRiver Great StourRiver Little StourRiver Upper Great StourRiver WantsumRiver WinghamAylesford StreamBrook Stream (Spiders Castle Dyke)Kennington Stream (Pen Lee)NailbourneRuckinge DykeSarre Penn (Fishbourne Stream)Whitehall DykeWhitewater Dyke

List of rivers of Great Britain
Languages