Identification

Title

Historic Landscape Characterisation

Alternative title(s)

Historic Landuse Characterisation

HLC

Abstract

Cornwall Council’s Historic Environment Service pioneered the methodology for Historic Landscape Characterisation (HLC), undertaking the first national countywide characterisation in 1994. The Cornwall Method is set out by Peter Herring in 'Historic Landscape Assessment, Presenting a Method' (1998). Characterisation continues to be fundamental to our interpretation and presentation of the historic environment. It allows the historic dimension of the whole landscape to be fully considered and provides a readily understood context for the surviving archaeological remains. The HLC, of the whole of Cornwall, was undertaken as part of a general Landscape Assessment of the county (published as Cornwall County Council 1996). The HLC was supported and funded by the Countryside Commission (now the Countryside Agency), English Heritage, Cornwall County Council and the six local District Councils. The Cornwall HLC was a pilot study encouraged by English Heritage who were investigating ways of assessing the historic environment, to enable it to be placed alongside the natural environment in discussions of sustainable development. The method was based on a comprehensive and systematic collection of disparate data that was then mapped, assessed and interpreted by the Service. It represented a new way of characterising the landscape and understanding its evolution. The Cornwall Method has since been adopted and adapted by local Authorities and heritage Agencies throughout the British Isles and Europe. A basic premise of HLC is that the whole of Britain is one continuous but multifarious historic landscape. All natural habitats in Britain are 'semi-natural', being the products of natural conditions (geology, soils, exposure, native communities etc.) as altered by various land use systems. These systems may have been either deliberate, like woodland management, grazing of heathlands (including cliffs and coastal valleys), and creation of pastures, or incidental to other processes, like the silting of estuaries as a result of tinning, or the creation of marginal habitats alongside roads. As a result, all semi-natural habitats are part of the historic environment and so there are no parts of Britain that do not have a definable historic character. It is possible to establish, through study, the predominant historic landscape character of each parcel of land in Cornwall. The landscape is comprised of a mosaic of blocks of land whose predominant historical landscape character is both various and repeating. This quality allows parcels to be assigned, using a number of systematic sources (mainly maps), to one of around twenty clearly distinguishable HLC Types. Most Types can be found scattered across the whole of Cornwall and most can be further subdivided according to the sensitivity of characterisation required. To create a smaller-scale and simplified characterisation of the whole county, the Types mapping can be simplified, generalised and, to some extent, reinterpreted, to produce a map of Historic Landscape Character Zones. Accuracy of Content: The level of detail and the accuracy of the information held on each HLC type reflect the nature or content of the sources used to compile the record. Users of this data should consult the HER to clarify the level of reliability and/or precision that should be afforded to information derived from the HBSMR. The Site and its Content is provided for your general information only; we do not undertake that Content will always be accurate and complete. Therefore, if you propose to do, or refrain from doing, something in reliance upon Content you find on the Site, you must check the accuracy of the relevant Content by some other means.

Resource type

dataset

Resource locator

http://map.cornwall.gov.uk/arcgis/services/inspire/inspire_historic/MapServer/WMSServer?request=GetCapabilities&service=WMS

name: Cornwall Inspire Historic WMS

function: information

http://map.cornwall.gov.uk/arcgis/services/inspire/inspire_historic/MapServer/WFSServer?request=GetCapabilities&service=WFS

name: Cornwall Inspire Historic WFS

Unique resource identifier

code

cornwall_historic_landscape_characterisation

codeSpace

unknown

Dataset language

eng

Spatial reference system

code identifying the spatial reference system

http://www.opengis.net/def/crs/EPSG/0/4258

Classification of spatial data and services

Topic category

environment

Keywords

Keyword set

keyword value

historical_evolution

originating controlled vocabulary

title

GEMET - Concepts, version 2.4

reference date

date type

revision

effective date

2010-01-13

Keyword set

keyword value

Area management/restriction/regulation zones and reporting units

originating controlled vocabulary

title

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

reference date

date type

publication

effective date

2008-06-01

Geographic location

West bounding longitude

-6.0836791984

East bounding longitude

-3.3920288078

North bounding latitude

51.3271792391

South bounding latitude

49.5073766578

Temporal reference

Temporal extent

Begin position

End position

Dataset reference date

date type

creation

effective date

1994-01-01

Frequency of update

irregular

Quality and validity

Lineage

The HLC, of the whole of Cornwall, was undertaken as part of a general Landscape Assessment of the county (published as Cornwall County Council 1996). The HLC was supported and funded by the Countryside Commission (now the Countryside Agency), English Heritage, Cornwall County Council and the six local District Councils. The Cornwall HLC was a pilot study encouraged by English Heritage who were then investigating ways of assessing the historic environment, to enable it to be placed alongside the natural environment in discussions of sustainable development. The method was based on a comprehensive and systematic collection of disparate data that was then mapped, assessed and interpreted by the Service. It represented a new way of characterising the landscape and understanding its evolution. The Cornwall Method has since been adopted and adapted by local Authorities and heritage Agencies throughout the British Isles and Europe.

Conformity

Data format

name of format

unknown

version of format

unknown

Constraints related to access and use

Constraint set

Limitations on public access

You are permitted to view, print and download extracts from this site for your own personal, non-commercial use on the following basis: (a) documents or related graphics are not modified in anyway; (b) no graphics are used separately from accompanying text; (c) material must be reproduced accurately and not used in a misleading context; (d) the copyright and all other intellectual property notices of the Cornwall Council or any third party notices (where applicable) must appear on all copies; (e) you shall not copy, sell, lease, rent, licence, sublicence, grant any rights in, transfer, distribute, time-share or otherwise any part of this site to any third party; (f) where content and materials on the site is intended for purposes other than that permitted above, prior written consent must be obtained from the Cornwall Council; (g) where the site contains third party material, you must obtain authorisation from the relevant third party before reproducing, storing or otherwise copying any of the material.

Constraint set

Use constraints

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. We permit you to use the Site and its Content for the purposes for which it is intended on an individual computing device having a single central processing unit. You may download to a local hard disk and print extracts from the Site. You are not otherwise entitled to copy, distribute or transmit any of the Content, or to incorporate any of it into any website (except by way of linkage in accordance with Linking to the Site below) or other work whatsoever, nor may you broadcast, publish or facilitate any public performance of Content. We reserve copyright of all material supplied by the HER and such copyright must be acknowledged by the user.

Responsible organisations

Responsible party

contact position

Geographic Information Service

organisation name

Cornwall Council

full postal address

Camborne One Stop Shop Dolcoath Avenue

Camborne

TR14 8RY

United Kingdom

telephone number

01872 322882

email address

gis@cornwall.gov.uk

web address

http://www.cornwall.gov.uk/

responsible party role

resourceProvider

Metadata on metadata

Metadata point of contact

contact position

Geographic Information Service

organisation name

Cornwall Council

full postal address

Camborne One Stop Shop Dolcoath Avenue

Camborne

TR14 8RY

United Kingdom

telephone number

01872 322882

email address

gis@cornwall.gov.uk

web address

http://www.cornwall.gov.uk/

responsible party role

pointOfContact

Metadata date

2017-10-19T16:55:40

Metadata language

eng