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List Entry Summary

This monument is scheduled under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 as amended as it appears to the Secretary of State to be of national importance. This entry is a copy, the original is held by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.

Name: Earl's Hill Camp: a small multivallate hillfort and an adjacent cross dyke on Pontesford Hill

List Entry Number: 1020152

Location

The monument may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

County: 
District: Shropshire
District Type: Unitary Authority
Parish: Pontesbury

National Park: Not applicable to this List entry.

Grade: Not applicable to this List entry.

Date first scheduled: 15-May-1934

Date of most recent amendment: 18-Sep-2001


Legacy System Information

The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.

Legacy System: RSM

UID: 34903


Asset Groupings

This List entry does not comprise part of an Asset Grouping. Asset Groupings are not part of the official record but are added later for information.


List Entry Description

Summary of Monument

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Reasons for Designation

Small multivallate hillforts are defined as fortified enclosures of varying shape, generally between 1 and 5ha in size and located on hilltops. They are defined by boundaries consisting of two or more lines of closely set earthworks spaced at intervals of up to 15m. These entirely surround the interior except on sites located on promontories, where cliffs may form one or more sides of the monument. They date to the Iron Age period, most having been constructed and occupied between the sixth century BC and the mid-first century AD. Small multivallate hillforts are generally regarded as settlements of high status, occupied on a permanent basis. Recent interpretations suggest that the construction of multiple earthworks may have had as much to do with display as with defence. Earthworks may consist of a rampart alone or of a rampart and ditch which, on many sites, are associated with counterscarp banks and internal quarry scoops. Access to the interior is generally provided by one or two entrances, which either appear as simple gaps in the earthwork or inturned passages, sometimes with guardrooms. The interior generally consists of settlement evidence including round houses, four and six post structures interpreted as raised granaries, roads, pits, gullies, hearths and a variety of scattered post and stake holes. Evidence from outside numerous examples of small multivallate hillforts suggests that extra-mural settlement was of a similar nature. Small multivallate hillforts are rare with around 100 examples recorded nationally. Most are located in the Welsh Marches and the south-west with a concentration of small monuments in the north-east. In view of the rarity of small multivallate hillforts and their importance in understanding the nature of settlement and social organisation within the Iron Age period, all examples with surviving archaeological remains are believed to be of national importance.

The small multivallate hillfort on Earl's Hill and the cross dyke on Pontesford Hill are fine examples of these classes of monument. This multi-phased hillfort is one of a group of broadly contemporary hillforts constructed along the hills overlooking the Rea Brook valley. In common with other defended settlements Earl's Hill Camp is considered to contain significant buried deposits, structural features, artefactual and organic remains, which have the potential to illustrate many aspects of Iron Age life. The defences will retain evidence of their construction and their later modification. Organic remains surviving in the buried ground surfaces beneath the ramparts and within the ditches will also provide important information about the local environment and the use of the surrounding land before the hillfort was constructed and during its occupation.

Cross dykes are substantial linear earthworks typically between 0.2km and 1km long and comprising one or more ditches arranged beside and parallel to one or more banks. They generally occur in upland situations, running across ridges and spurs. The evidence of excavation and analogy with associated monuments demonstrates that their construction dates to the second half of the second millennium BC, although they may have been reused later. Current information favours the view that they were used as territorial boundary markers, probably demarcating land allotment within communities, and some may have served as defensive earthworks. Cross dykes are of considerable importance for any analysis of settlement and land use in the Bronze Age. While it is a significant monument in its own right, the importance of the cross dyke on Pontesford Hill is enhanced by its proximity to, and probable association with, the hillfort on Earl's Hill. The cross dyke will retain evidence of its construction and any later use, and, like the neighbouring hillfort, buried organic remains are expected to survive which will provide further information about the environment and the use of this area throughout the later prehistoric period.

History

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Details

The monument includes the earthwork and buried remains of a small multivallate hillfort and an adjacent cross dyke, which lie within two separate areas of protection.

The hillfort occupies the spinal summit of Earl's Hill, a steeply sided prominence with a top which slopes gradually from north to south. From this location there are commanding views of the undulating lowlands to the north and east, and the hills and valleys to west and south. Earl's Hill Camp lies 0.7km to the south of the small multivallate hillfort on Pontesford Hill, which is the subject of a separate scheduling.

Earl's Hill Camp is sub-rectangular in plan, with overall dimensions of 85m to 110m north west to south east by about 280m south west to north east. The defensive circuit of the hillfort encloses an area of about 2.9ha. Its size would suggest that it was occupied by a large community where particular centralised economic and social activities were practiced. The earthwork defences of the hillfort have been created by cutting into the slopes of the hill. The excavated material has been used to form ramparts with steep outer faces, which are for the most part flat-topped, giving a step or terrace like appearance around the top of the hill. The earthwork defences defining the western side of the hillfort consist of two parallel ramparts separated by a narrow terrace, which marks the line of the infilled ditch. At the southern end two further closely set ramparts separated by a narrow berm or ditch provide additional lines of defence. On the more precipitous eastern side, where there are rock outcrops, the hillfort is defined by a single rampart. Access into the hillfort was from the north where an out-turned entrance causeway connects with a terrace cutting into the northern side of the hill. At a later date the hillfort defences were partially remodelled in order to create a fort consisting of two defended areas. An oval-shaped enclosure, of approximately 1.1ha, was constructed around the higher and more rocky part of the hill top, and involved the enlargement of the northern sections of the eastern rampart and the inner rampart on the western side. The entrance into the hillfort was also renewed at this time. The ends of ramparts were turned inwards in order to create a narrow entrance passage about 4m wide. A more simply defined entrance, 5m wide, provided access from the northern enclosure to the defended area at the south. The ditch to the east of this entrance passage consists of a series of quarry scoops cutting into the rock, the tops of which are still plainly visible. The uneven profile of the western ditch terminal flanking the northern entrance suggests that this part of the ditch was also of similar construction.

A further alteration to the defences of the northern enclosure included the intentional infilling of the entrance passage to the southern enclosure. It would therefore appear that by this time the southern enclosure had ceased to be used.

Within the interiors of both enclosures are a series of level and gently sloping areas, which have been created by cutting into and depositing material along the more steeply sloping ground. These internal terraces are considered to be platforms on which domestic and ancillary buildings were constructed. The structural remains of which and their associated deposits will survive as buried features.

Near to the highest point within the northern enclosure are the remains of a shallow rock-cut trench, averaging 0.7m wide, defining an oval area 21m by 24m. The exact function of this feature is unclear, but it appears to be modern and may well have been the base for a military installation used during World War II, such as a searchlight battery or aircraft decoy. Holes drilled into rock outcrops nearby may be associated with this feature.

About 60m downslope from the northern entrance of the hillfort, aligned south west to north east and running across the slope, are the remains of outer defences. They consist of two short, flat-topped ramparts each with a corresponding ditch and a counterscarp bank to the north west, separated by a gap of approximately 21m. The defences to the east run up to the precipitous eastern side of the hill. The form and location of these defences suggest that they acted in some way to control access to the hillfort from the north, but it would appear that they were of limited use as defensive outworks.

On lower ground to the north west of these outer defences, and located within a separate area, is a cross dyke. This linear earthwork defines the western side of the shelf forming the summit of Pontesford Hill and is aligned NNE-SSW along the shoulder of the hill. It consists of a bank about 190m long, and between 8m and 11m wide, bounded on the eastern side by a ditch formed by a series of irregular quarry scoops up to 6m wide. Although this ditch has been largely infilled it survives as a buried feature. The form of the bank is accentuated by the sloping ground on which it was constructed, and stands 0.8m to 1.4m high on the eastern side and between 1.4m and 2.3m high on the western side. At its northern end the bank curves inward and to the south it has a stepped profile.

In the post-medieval period Pontesford Hill was subdivided by a network of woodland boundary banks, many of which are depicted on the earliest Ordnance Survey map for the area published in 1833. One of these banks, constructed of earth and stone, runs up the northern side of the hill near to the north eastern end of the cross dyke. It joins another bank of similar construction running along the base of the shallow valley between Pontesford Hill and Earl's Hill, and cuts across the southern tail of the cross dyke. Two 20m lengths of these two woodland boundary banks at either end of the cross dyke are included in the scheduling in order to preserve their relationship with the cross dyke.

All fence posts, together with the Ordnance Survey triangulation pillar and the way marker post on Earl's Hill, are excluded from the scheduling, although the ground beneath all these features is included.

MAP EXTRACT The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract. It includes a 2 metre boundary around the archaeological features, considered to be essential for the monument's support and preservation.


Selected Sources

Books and journals
Cunliffe, B, Iron Age Communities in Britain, (1978), 216
Forde-Johnston, J, 'Archaeological Journal' in Earl's Hill, Pontesbury and related hillforts in England & Wales, , Vol. 119, (1962), 66-91
Other
Aerial photograghs of Earl's Hill Camp in Shropshire SMR,

Map

National Grid Reference: SJ 40837 04670, SJ 40857 05047


© Crown Copyright and database right 2018. All rights reserved. Ordnance Survey Licence number 100024900.
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This copy shows the entry on 25-Apr-2024 at 12:13:05.