At Whinfell Forest there is a farm called Julian Bower, originally built to support the Keeper[citation needed].
Some English turf mazes are very similar in their layout to Scandinavian labyrinths, which usually have their paths marked with stones.
At Grothornet, in Vartdal in the Sunnmore Province of Norway, there is a stone-lined labyrinth called "Den Julianske Borg" ("Julian's Castle").
The name is believed to be derived from Julus, son of Aeneas of Troy, and the word place-name element burgh, meaning "a fortified place", "fort" or "castle".
In popular legend, the walls of the city of Troy were constructed in such a complex and confusing way that any enemy who entered them would be unable to find his way out.