Moot Hill

A moot hill or mons placiti (statute hill) is a hill or mound historically used as an assembly or meeting place, as a moot hall is a meeting or assembly building, also traditionally to decide local issues. In early medieval Britain, such hills were used for "moots", meetings of local people to settle local business. Among other things, proclamations might be read; decisions might be taken; court cases might be settled at a moot. Although some moot hills were naturally occurring features or had been created long before as burial mounds, others were purpose-built.

Read more about Moot Hill:  Etymology, Siting and Purpose, Origins, Summoning People To The Moot, Links With The Land, The Demise of Moot Hills, A List of Moot Hills, Gallows Hills, Murder Holes, Their Associated Baronies and Other Details

Famous quotes containing the words moot and/or hill:

    For I am shave as neigh as any frere.
    But yit I praye unto youre curteisye:
    Beeth hevy again, or elles moot I die.
    Geoffrey Chaucer (1340?–1400)

    “Oh, let’s go up the hill and scare ourselves,
    As reckless as the best of them tonight,
    By setting fire to all the brush we piled
    With pitchy hands to wait for rain or snow....”
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)