It is a Cornish tradition to make a vow and then attempt to move a rocking stone, or logan rock.
12.
He baptised this child himself at the Rocking Stone in Pontypridd, naming her Gwenhiolan Iarlles Morganwg ( meaning'Gwenhiolan, Countess of Glamorgan').
13.
Taking place at the Rocking Stone in Pontypridd, it involved Price addressing the sun at noon, and women dressed as the Three Graces were involved.
14.
There are several locations along the Costa da Morte that have a " pedra de abalar ", ( i . e ., an " oscillating stone " ), or rocking stone.
15.
The townland contains one Scheduled Historic Monument : a Portal tomb ( grid ref : C3909 0113 ), a collapsed single chambered tomb of four stones, known locally as The Rocking Stone.
16.
For example, there are giant " pedras de abalar " ( i . e . " oscillating stones ", the common term in English is rocking stone ) throughout the region.
17.
He flourished about 839 . Although he is said to have been a hermit, according to tradition Saint Inan often visited Beith, frequenting Cuff Hill with its Rocking Stone and various other prehistoric monuments.
18.
He joined the Society of the Rocking Stone, a Neo-Druidic group that met at the Y Maen Chwyf stone circle in Pontypridd, and by 1837 had become one of its leading members.
19.
It should also be noted that the name for rocking stones could be a modified form of the Danish word " logre, " which means'to wag the tail,'and this suggests possible Norse origin.
20.
The Rocking Stone there used to be a popular picnic destination in Victorian times : people would travel from Halifax, climb upon it and spread their lunches while enjoying the sensation of rocking gently while seated upon the huge rock.