Advanced | Help | Encyclopedia
Directory


Liddington Castle

Liddington Castle is a late Bronze Age and early Iron Age hill fort in the English county of Wiltshire.

It is sited on a commanding high point close to the Ridgeway and covers an area of 3ha. Liddington Castle was one of the earliest hill forts in Britain with first occupation dating to the seventh century BC. The earthworks consist of a relatively simple oval bank of timber and earth fronted by a ditch with opposing causewayed entrances on the east and west sides. The western entrance was later blocked off and the eastern one may have been lined with sarsen stones. A palisade of wooden posts may have lined the top of the bank. During a later phase the bank and ditch were improved and a rampart of dumped chalk excavated form the enlarged increased the height of the bank.

Excavation within the hill fort revealed a large pit 1.5m in diameter and at least 2.4m deep. The bottom of the feature was not reached and it was interpreted by the archaeologists who dug it as a ritual shaft. Similar shafts have been recorded at Wapley Hill in [{Hertfordshire]] and Cadbury Castle in Devon. Finds of pottery suggest Liddington Castle was abandoned during the fifth century BC with perhaps some later re-occupation during the Roman period.

Liddington Castle is sometimes suggested as a possible site of Mount Badon and thus the location of the late fifth century AD Battle of Mount Badon in Arthurian myth. There is no archaeological evidence to indicate activity during this later period however.

External references








Links: Addme | Keyword Research | Paid Inclusion | Femail | Software | Completive Intelligence

Add URL | About Slider | FREE Slider Toolbar - Simply Amazing
Copyright © 2000-2008 Slider.com. All rights reserved.
Content is distributed under the GNU Free Documentation License.