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You are here: Home > Environment and Waste > Countryside > Country Parks > Watermead Country Park > Pre-History or Legend?
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Pre-History or Legend?

Winter at King Lear's Lake in Watermead
  • The main lake at Watermead is King Lear's Lake and has been named after the legend of King Lear, who ruled Britain in the 8th century.
  • On his death he was buried in a chamber under the River Soar - possibly close to this lake!
  • The statues, built on a platform in the lake, show the final scene from Shakespeare's play of King Lear.

The History of Watermead

  • Sand and gravel for the concrete industry have been extracted from the valley of the River Soar for many years.
  • In the early 1980s the Leicestershire County, Leicester City and Charnwood Borough Councils joined forces to reclaim the area's derelict pits for recreation.
Field Poppies at Watermead
  • Over the last 15 years much work has been done to create the attractive countryside that now exists.
  • During the extraction of sand and gravel there was a very important archaeological discovery. Two human skulls, probably dating from the Bronze Age, and the bones of the Auroch, a primitive wild ox, were found on the other side of the river from King Lear's Lake.
  • Associated with these finds was a "burnt mound", a primitive cooking stove. Stones were heated in a fire and then plunged into water to produce steam and hot water to cook food.

further information

Contact: The Ranger
Telephone: 0116 267 1944
E-mail: watermead@leics.gov.uk
Last Updated:
6 September 2007
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