Westbury Camp

Westbury Camp
Location of Westbury Camp in Somerset
Location Draycott, Somerset, England
Coordinates 51°15′30″N 2°43′37″W / 51.25833°N 2.72694°W / 51.25833; -2.72694Coordinates: 51°15′30″N 2°43′37″W / 51.25833°N 2.72694°W / 51.25833; -2.72694
Area 2.3 hectares (5.7 acres)
Built Iron Age
Reference no. 194654[1]

Westbury Camp is a univallate Iron Age hill fort in the Sedgemoor district of Somerset, England.[2][3] The hill fort is situated approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) north-east from the village of Draycott. The camp is largely situated in a hill slope. The north east defences has largely been destroyed by small quarries over the years. The narrow top of the hill bank suggests that it may have been surmounted by a dry stone wall. Along part of the east side of the camp there are traces of a berm between the bank and the outer ditch and at the western angle shallow quarry pits occur internally and externally set back from the 'rampart'.[4]

Background

Further information: Hill fort

Hill forts developed in the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age, roughly the start of the first millennium BC.[5] The reason for their emergence in Britain, and their purpose, has been a subject of debate. It has been argued that they could have been military sites constructed in response to invasion from continental Europe, sites built by invaders, or a military reaction to social tensions caused by an increasing population and consequent pressure on agriculture. The dominant view since the 1960s has been that the increasing use of iron led to social changes in Britain. Deposits of iron ore were located in different places to the tin and copper ore necessary to make bronze, and as a result trading patterns shifted and the old elites lost their economic and social status. Power passed into the hands of a new group of people.[6] Archaeologist Barry Cunliffe believes that population increase still played a role and has stated "[the forts] provided defensive possibilities for the community at those times when the stress [of an increasing population] burst out into open warfare. But I wouldn't see them as having been built because there was a state of war. They would be functional as defensive strongholds when there were tensions and undoubtedly some of them were attacked and destroyed, but this was not the only, or even the most significant, factor in their construction".[7]

See also

References

  1. "Westbudy Camp". National Monuments Record. English Heritage. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
  2. "Westbury Camp hillfort, N of Stoke Woods, Rodney Stoke". Somerset Historic Environment Record. Somerset County Council A. Retrieved 16 January 2011.
  3. "Westbury Camp". Fortified England. Retrieved 16 January 2011.
  4. Digital Digging – Hill forts, Westbury, Somerset
  5. Payne, Andrew; Corney, Mark; Cunliffe, Barry (2007), The Wessex Hillforts Project: Extensive Survey of Hillfort Interiors in Central Southern England, English Heritage, p. 1, ISBN 978-1-873592-85-4
  6. Sharples, Niall M (1991), English Heritage Book of Maiden Castle, London: B. T. Batsford, pp. 71–72, ISBN 0-7134-6083-0
  7. Time Team: Swords, skulls and strongholds, Channel 4, 2008-05-19, retrieved 16 September 2009
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