It's impressive today, but how did it look in prehistory?
A thread on our favourite recreations / reconstructions from books, guides and on-site signage 👇👇
Arguably the most famous hillfort in Britain, the multivallate Maiden Castle #Dorset encloses over 17ha and comprises many phases of construction and modification the appearance of which can be difficult to convey
The 3rd major phase of Middle Iron Age settlement in the SW corner of Maiden Castle, with rows of roundhouses now aligned to a system of internal roads
We don’t know who painted this picture of Britons evicted from Maiden Castle in Robin Place’s 1977 book *The Celts: Peoples of the Past* but it neatly sums up the idea that the Durotriges were removed by the #Roman army
The enigmatic Dwarfie Stane on the island of #Hoy, part of the #Orkney archipelago
Looked after by @welovehistory @HistEnvScot it's quite possibly Britain's only #Neolithic rock cut tomb
A peedie thread for #TombTuesday
📷 Aug 2024 👇👇
The Dwarfie Stane #Hoy is a chonky slab of red sandstone (measuring 2m high and 8m long) into which a 2 chambers linked by a short entrance passage have been carved
Plan: J Callander *Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland* 70 (1936)
#TombTuesday
Today, the Dwarfie Stane #Hoy can be freely accessed, a large blocking stone, which seems to have originally sealed the entrance, lies nearby
It's #HillfortsWednesday and here’s the curiously enigmatic (and infrequently examined) prehistoric earthwork enclosures atop the wonderfully named Thundersbarrow Hill #WestSussex@sdnpa 😍
Thundersbarrow Early Iron Age hillfort sits brooding atop a low ridge at the southern slope of the chalk downs @sdnpa above the Sussex coastal plain and Shoreham-by-Sea
It’s #HillfortsWednesday and we wonder if the Iron Age univallate Trundle has ever looked more gorgeous than in this incredible pic by @DavidRAbram here, looking N towards the mist swathed #WestSussex Weald 🤩
The Iron Age ramparts of the Trundle #WestSussex partially enclose the spiral circuit of an earlier causewayed enclosure, the remains of which can be seen in this epic photo by @DavidRAbram
The distinctive imprint of a Neolithic causewayed enclosure is evident within the polygonal circuit of the Iron Age Trundle #WestSussex as slight earthworks and as dark lines to the SW in this early air photo from the 1930s in @SAS_Library@sussex_society
Figsbury Ring comprises a fine set of prehistoric enclosure systems on the chalk above Salisbury in #Wiltshire looked after by @nationaltrust@NatTrustArch
For many years, Figsbury Ring, depicted here in the Ordnance Survey for 1927 with the Roman road from Old Sarum to Winchester to the south, was thought to be a bivallate Iron Age hillfort...
...but there was something strange about the innermost circuit
Double ramparts define the 22ha hillfort of Hod Hill #Dorset except on the W with a single bank. Quarry pits form a line behind the ramparts. A Roman fort occupies the NW
The 2.6ha Roman fort at Hod Hill dates to c AD 44-52. It reused the N and W ramparts of the hillfort and was defended on its S and E sides by a rampart and 3 ditches
Excavations in 1951-8 revealed much of the internal structure