Considering my research topic, maybe I should start off
discussing what a ‘hillfort’ is. Easy, right? The name gives it away – a fort,
on top of a hill. Done. Except, not really. Hillforts were first built in
Britain in the Bronze Age (2500 – 800 BC), but they are most associated with
the Iron Age (800 BC – 43 AD), and the majority were built during this period.
They are “the symbol” of the Iron Age in Britain, and as such have been heavily
researched.
The study of hillforts is (although fairly recent in the
grand scheme of history), extremely diverse and varied. Thomas Hardy had a go -
in 1885 Hardy published a short story in the Detroit Post called A Tryst at an Ancient Earthwork, where
he writes of “Mai-Dun, the Castle of the Great Hill … with an obtrusive
personality that compels the senses to regard it”.
He was talking about Maiden Castle, arguably the most
famous, and most easily identifiable hillfort in Britain. It’s situated in the
Dorset countryside, and has an area of around 18 hectares. It’s a huge
structure, obvious even today, and one can only imagine what influence it had
over people in the Iron Age.
Maiden Castle a
So regarding hillforts, let’s break the name down into its
three main parts: 1) a defensive 2) structure 3) on a hill.
2) Is fairly simple, and really the only part anyone can
definitively agree on. A hillfort is a structure that is formed primarily from
earth ramparts – i.e. a bank and ditch. Hillforts can have one rampart (univallate),
or multiple (multivallate) – Maiden Castle has four. These earth ramparts can
be reinforced with timber and/or stone (although the former is much more
common). Although some hillforts have now been ploughed out, the vast majority
in Britain are still present in the landscape today – making them an almost
complete dataset in terms of archaeological settlements.
3) "On a hill" is a little more problematic. Whilst it is
true that a typical hillfort is, quite obviously, on a hill, it seems as though
this is not a necessary requirement. Some areas of Britain, such as East
Anglia, don’t really have any hills. And yet, in the Iron Age, they still built
“hillforts”. Everyone built hillforts. Just because they didn’t have hills
didn’t stop them, and it doesn't make sense to exclude these low-lying sites just because of geography.
Stonea Camp in Cambridgeshire, situated at a height of 2m
above sea levelb.
1) “Defensive’ is the real kicker, and much debated amongst
hillfort scholars. In the 1980s the first scholarsc started to
question whether hillforts really were forts. Their conclusion was that no, the
style and structure of some hillforts heavily suggests that in all
practicality, they could never have been defensible. Alternate suggested uses range from cattle enclosures, through storage facilities, to glorified
“villages”, but the message is clear – hillforts don’t have to be “defensive”.
So really, hillforts are structures that are maybe on hills,
but not necessarily so, and some were used for defence (i.e. as forts), but not
all of them.
And I don’t think that this lack of definition is really a
problem – if we attempt to define something too rigidly, then we end up left
with nothing at all, and what use is that?
a - image from http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/newsletter/issue17/natinv.html
b - image from Archaeology: a Framework for the Eastern Counties, 2.
research agenda and strategy, ed. N. Brown & J. Glazebrook.
c - for further reading start with Bowden & McOmish, 1987. 'The Required Barrier' in Scottish Archaeological
Review, 4(2), pp.76–84.
i just wanted to point out that I HAVE BEEN TO MAIDEN CASTLE. *proud*
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