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Worlebury Camp

Worlebury Camp (also known as Worlebury Hillfort) is the site of an Iron Age hillfort on Worlebury Hill, north of Weston-super-Mare in Somerset, England. The fort was well defended with numerous walls, embankments and ditches around the site. Several large triangular platforms have been uncovered around the sides of the fort, lower down on the hillside. Nearly one hundred storage pits of various sizes were cut into the bedrock, and many of these contained human remains, coins, and other artefacts.[1] During the 19th and 20th centuries the fort suffered damage and was threatened with complete destruction on multiple occasions. Now, the site is a designated Scheduled monument.[2][3][4] It falls within the Weston Woods Local Nature Reserve which was declared to Natural England by the North Somerset Council in 2005.[5]

Worlebury Camp
A picture of the present-day site
LocationNorth Somerset, Somerset, England
Coordinates51°21′26.73″N 2°59′6.55″W / 51.3574250°N 2.9851528°W / 51.3574250; -2.9851528Coordinates: 51°21′26.73″N 2°59′6.55″W / 51.3574250°N 2.9851528°W / 51.3574250; -2.9851528
BuiltDuring the Iron Age
Architectural style(s)British pre-Roman Architecture
Official nameWorlebury Camp: a large multivallate hillfort on Worlebury Hill
Designated22 February 1915
Reference no.1011260
Worlebury Camp shown within Somerset

History

Animated LIDAR data of Worlebury Camp

In The Ancient Entrenchments and Camps of Gloucestershire, Edward J. Burrow mentions that probably either the Goidel or Brython people had initially built the Worlebury Camp.[6] The Belgae people subsequently overthrew the initial inhabitants and occupied the camp for a while, but they were subsequently eliminated at the hands of the Romans.[7]

Worlebury Camp has been explored at various times over a period of 150 years. From 1851 to 1852, Charles Dymond, Edwin Martin Atkins, and Francis Warre excavated and surveyed the Worlebury Camp.[8] Dymond returned in 1880 to continue the excavation, which lasted until 1881. Another century passed before the Woodspring Museum from Weston-super-Mare excavated more of Worlebury camp in 1987 to 1988. Finally, in 1998, the Avon Extensive Urban Study team performed the latest (as of 2008) assessment of the site.[9]

A condition survey undertaken in 2017-18 resulted in a request for an analytical earthwork survey which was undertaken by Historic England in 2018–19. While the survey disclosed some evidence about the use of the hillfort and its later history, many questions still remain.[10]

Location

 
Plan of the camp

The fort is located on the summit of Worlebury Hill, 109 metres (358 ft) above sea level.[11] It is in the present-day North Somerset, above the seaside resort of Weston-super-Mare[9] and close to the village of Worle.[12]

Its inhabitants would have had a view of the countryside as well as any potential invaders. They would have been able to see out over to Sugar Loaf Mountain, the Black Mountains, the Mendip Hills, Dunkery Beacon, Sand Point, and Wales.[13] This view is no longer as unobstructed as it once was because of the presence of so many trees spread over the hill.[14]

Archaeological findings

Platforms

There are a number of triangular platforms on the slopes around the fort. The apexes of these triangles are flush with the hillside, with the base projecting in the downhill direction. However, the upper surface is approximately level. The front faces of these platforms are about 1.7 metres (5.6 ft) above the hillside, and they have ditches in front of them to improve their defence. In a letter to Warre, Atkins theorised that the structures were slingers' platforms or archers' stations.[8] Several sling stones have been found around them, offering some credence to the theory that slingers stood upon these platforms. Dymond mentions the stones in his book:

Several of them were broken, as though they had been used in the attack [on the fort], as, indeed, many of them probably were.[8]

— Charles Dymond, Worlebury: An Ancient Stronghold in the County of Somerset

Walls and ditches

 
An artist's rendition of Worlebury Camp from a book published in 1886

Worlebury Hill is bordered on its northern and western sides by steep cliffs dropping down into the Bristol Channel between Weston Bay and Sand Bay.[15] These would have rendered the fort nearly immune to attack from those directions.[1][16] Nevertheless, the fort still has one wall on its northern side and one on its western side, both very near the edge of the cliffs. On the south side, a single rampart and a ditch guarded the fort. The level east side was protected by two stone ramparts and five ditches.[8] Parts of these ramparts were over 11 metres (35 ft) high measuring from the bottom of the ditch as of 1875.[17]

The walls of the fort are around 1 metre (3.3 ft) thick. However, because they are made up of dry-laid stone, the removal of a few stones would be sufficient to bring the entire wall collapsing down. To prevent access to the walls themselves, the inhabitants of the fort raised large breastworks around the base of the walls by piling up rock rubble against the bases. These rubble barriers are over 1.22 metres (4.0 ft) high, and in places they are over 1.22 metres (4.0 ft) thick. Attackers would have had to clear away the rubble before being able to attack the wall, and all the while they would be under direct fire from defenders on the top of the wall.[8]

Storage pits

The area inside the outer wall has a series of hut circles and 93 storage pits cut directly into the bedrock, which is only around 60 centimetres (2.0 ft) beneath the surface of the soil in most places. Eighteen of the Storage pits are in what Dymond calls the "keep", one is in the 'transverse fosse' (a fosse is a ditch usually dug for protection[18]), and seventy-four of the pits are outside the "keep" but still enclosed within the exterior walls. The average size of the pits is around 2 metres (6.6 ft) long by 2 metres wide and 1.5 metres (4.9 ft) deep. The largest pit is roughly triangular in shape, with sides measuring 3 metres (9.8 ft), 2.7 metres (8.9 ft), and 2.4 metres (7.9 ft) long. The smallest pit is 1 metre (3.3 ft) long by 7 metres (23 ft) wide.[8] The inhabitants used them to store grain, as is evidenced by the kernels of barley and wheat and the sherds of pots that were found in the pits. Several of the pits contained the remnants of peas and burned woven baskets. In addition, researchers also found sling stones and spindle whorls dated to the 1st or 2nd century BC inside them.[8][9]

 
A skull, found during Dymond's second exploration, which is gouged with many cuts from an edged weapon. (Drawn in 1886 for Dymond's book, Worlebury:An Ancient Stronghold in the County of Somerset.)

Eighteen of these pits were found to contain the remains of human skeletons, which are now stored in the Weston-super-Mare Museum in Weston-super-Mare.[16] Eighteen full skeletons were found, of which ten showed evidence of a violent death (including sword cuts in the skulls).[19][20] It is possible that the Romans or the Belgic raiders attacked the fort and killed the inhabitants.[1]

Artefacts

A cast copper alloy penannular collar of special interest to archaeologists has been found at the campsite. It may indicate that this hilltop site was used even before the Iron Age, since related artefacts tend to be found with Bronze Age items, and it was the first of its type found in Britain.[2] In 2006, a related copper penannular brooch dating to the 5th or 6th century AD was found in a spring between Brecon Beacons and the Black Mountains in Wales. A gold penannular bracelet was found in the River Perry.[21]

Roman coins have been found at Worlebury Camp since the Romans had established a presence by the end of the 1st century AD.[22] Many of the Roman coins bear the image of the Western Roman Emperor Honorius. This was inside the fort proper. Another coin was located by Trinity Path which leads towards the fort.[2]

Other findings at the site include animal remains, including the bones of pigs, oxen, horses, deer, goats, and even small birds. Limpet shells have also been found near the bones. Archaeologists found iron objects, adding further credibility to the idea that this fort is from the Iron Age. These objects include a chisel or borer, several spearheads and javelin heads, and an iron cone with charred wood inside and a rivet hole through the cone. Dymond assumes that this cone was once a plowshare. Stone artefacts, mainly slingstones and scrapers, have been discovered at the site. Just less than 36 flint chips have been found, of which some may be arrowheads. One good-quality arrowhead has been found. In addition to these, Dymond recorded finding a lead lump about the size of a walnut that he decided was probably a sling bullet.[8] Glastonbury type bead-rim pottery was also found at this site.[2] A socketed bronze axe from the late Bronze Age, which was found at Worlebury Hill in 1883, is in the Ashmolean Museum.[23]

Damage to the site

 
19th century quarry on the south side of the hill, seen looking north from "South Road"

19th century

Development of Weston-super-Mare since the 19th century has resulted in three episodes of potentially irreversible damage to the site. A quarry started operation in the southern side of Worlebury Hill in 1815 to mine for galena, calamine, and stone. The Bristol and Exeter Railway arrived in Weston-super-Mare in 1841, making it profitable to expand the village into a town.[2] In 1842, Weston-super-Mare became a town with the granting of the Improvement and Market Act of May 1842.[20] This act also proposed developing houses right over the brow of the hill. This would have gone straight through Worlebury Camp; however, the actual expansion never reached the site. By 1853, some development had occurred according to the proposed expansion, but it had skirted the hillfort and continued to the east.[2]

20th century

In the early 20th century, the Worlebury fort itself was damaged by boys rolling stones, including some from the walls of the fort, down the hill on which it stands. The Axbridge District of the Somerset Archaeological Society was taking steps to prevent such damage from happening again.[24]

21st Century

Some of the trees planted in the early 19th century had become very large, and their roots were growing into the archaeological structures. In 2005, the Forestry Commission gave permission for North Somerset Council to fell 300 trees to reduce the subsequent risks.[25] A member of the North Somerset Council, Christopher Richards, said: "If we had a storm up here and these trees came down, then the entire hillfort could be destroyed."[25]

The site was added to the Heritage at Risk Register in 2017, its condition noted as 'declining'.[26] A condition survey and an analytical earthwork survey revealed some evidence about the use of the hillfort and its later history but many questions remain.[27]

In 2020 the council initiated a consultation on plans to remove more "thousands" of trees to protect the remains.[28]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c . Roman-Britain.org. Archived from the original on 13 June 2010. Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Desk-Based Assessment of Land Adjacent to Numbers 2–10 Upper Kewstoke Road, Weston-Super-Mare, North Somerset" (PDF). Project: PJ 195. Mercian Archaeology. Retrieved 16 October 2010.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "Advice on Potential Landscape/Seascape and Visual Impacts of a Severn Barrage" (PDF). Land Use Consultants. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  4. ^ "Worlebury Camp: a large multivallate hillfort on Worlebury Hill, Weston-Super-Mare - 1011260 | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
  5. ^ "Weston woods LNR". Natural England. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  6. ^ Burrow, E. J. (1919). The Ancient Entrenchments and Camps of Gloucestershire. Cheltemham: E.J. Burrow & Co. Ltd. p. 18.
  7. ^ Palmer, L. S. (January–June 1921). "Some Early British Remains From a Mendip Cave". Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 51: 211–212. JSTOR 2843521. (subscription required)
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Dymond, Charles William (1886). Worlebury, an Ancient Stronghold in the County of Somerset. John Wright and Co. Printer, Stone Bridge.
  9. ^ a b c "Fortified England – Worlebury Camp". Fortified England. Retrieved 7 December 2010.
  10. ^ Bowden, M (2019). "Worlebury Hillfort and the Linear Earthworks to its east, Weston-super-Mare, North Somerset: Archaeological Survey Report. Historic England Research Report 93/2019". research.historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  11. ^ "British Hills". The UK Walking Club. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
  12. ^ "Welcome to the web site of the Worlebury Residents' Association". Worlebury Residents' Association. Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  13. ^ . North Somerset Council. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  14. ^ Satellite Map of Worlebury Camp (Web-based satellite map) (Map). 1 in = 50 ft. Cartography by Blom. Microsoft. Retrieved 6 November 2010.
  15. ^ . Origins+. Archived from the original on 15 July 2011. Retrieved 30 October 2010.
  16. ^ a b "Worlebury Camp". Megalithic Portal. Retrieved 24 January 2010.
  17. ^ Journal of the British Archaeological Association. British Archaeological Association. 1875. p. 270. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  18. ^ "Fosse". Princeton University. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  19. ^ Gerry Brooke (1 December 2009). "Footsteps into History – Worlebury". Bristol Evening Post. This is Bristol. Archived from the original on 5 May 2013. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  20. ^ a b "Weston super Mare – A Brief History". Weston-super-Mare. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
  21. ^ (PDF). Dewsbury District Metal Detecting Club. pp. 31, 73–74. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 March 2012. Retrieved 9 November 2010. (pp. 73–74)
  22. ^ Rippon, Stephen; Aalbersberg, G.; Allen, J. R. L.; Allen, S.; Cameron, N.; Gleed-Owen, C.; Davies, P.; Hamilton-Dyer, S.; Haslett, S.; Heathcote, J.; Jones, J.; Margetts, A.; Richards, D.; Shiel, N.; Smith, D.; Smith, J.; Timby, J.; Tinsley, H.; Williams, H.; Jones, Julie; Cameron, Nigel; Davies, Paul; Dobinson, Simon; Gleed-Owen, Chris; Haslett, Simon; Heathcote, Jen; Margetts, Anthony; Smith, David; Tinsley, Heather; Williams, Huw; Aalbersberg, Gerard; Hamilton-Dyer, Sheila; Timby, Jane; Shiel, Norman; Richards, David; Allen, Steven (2000). "The Romano-British Exploitation of Coastal Wetlands: Survey and Excavation on the North Somerset Levels, 1993-7" (PDF). Britannia. Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. 31: 69–200. doi:10.2307/526920. hdl:10036/19573. JSTOR 526920.
  23. ^ Royal haskoning. "15 Archaeology and heritage" (PDF). Bristol City Council. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  24. ^ "Committee on Ancient Earthworks and Fortified Enclosures Report on November 1909". Retrieved 16 October 2010.
  25. ^ a b "Trees threaten Iron Age hillfort". BBC. 12 January 2005. Retrieved 29 October 2010.
  26. ^ "Worlebury Camp: a large multivallate hillfort on Worlebury Hill, Weston-Super-Mare - North Somerset (UA) | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  27. ^ Bowden, M (2019). "Worlebury Hillfort and the Linear Earthworks to its east, Weston-super-Mare, North Somerset: Archaeological Survey Report. Historic England Research Report 93/2019". research.historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  28. ^ "Trees to be cleared to preserve Somerset Iron Age fort site". BBC News. 5 February 2020. Retrieved 5 February 2020.

External links

  • Worlebury Village Homepage
  • A street map with Worlebury Camp indicated by the arrow
  • A bird's-eye view of present-day Worlebury Camp

  This article incorporates material from Worlebury, an Ancient Stronghold in the County of Somerset (by Charles Dymond), a public domain source.

worlebury, camp, also, known, worlebury, hillfort, site, iron, hillfort, worlebury, hill, north, weston, super, mare, somerset, england, fort, well, defended, with, numerous, walls, embankments, ditches, around, site, several, large, triangular, platforms, hav. Worlebury Camp also known as Worlebury Hillfort is the site of an Iron Age hillfort on Worlebury Hill north of Weston super Mare in Somerset England The fort was well defended with numerous walls embankments and ditches around the site Several large triangular platforms have been uncovered around the sides of the fort lower down on the hillside Nearly one hundred storage pits of various sizes were cut into the bedrock and many of these contained human remains coins and other artefacts 1 During the 19th and 20th centuries the fort suffered damage and was threatened with complete destruction on multiple occasions Now the site is a designated Scheduled monument 2 3 4 It falls within the Weston Woods Local Nature Reserve which was declared to Natural England by the North Somerset Council in 2005 5 Worlebury CampA picture of the present day siteLocationNorth Somerset Somerset EnglandCoordinates51 21 26 73 N 2 59 6 55 W 51 3574250 N 2 9851528 W 51 3574250 2 9851528 Coordinates 51 21 26 73 N 2 59 6 55 W 51 3574250 N 2 9851528 W 51 3574250 2 9851528BuiltDuring the Iron AgeArchitectural style s British pre Roman ArchitectureScheduled monumentOfficial nameWorlebury Camp a large multivallate hillfort on Worlebury HillDesignated22 February 1915Reference no 1011260Worlebury Camp shown within Somerset Contents 1 History 2 Location 3 Archaeological findings 3 1 Platforms 3 2 Walls and ditches 3 3 Storage pits 3 4 Artefacts 4 Damage to the site 4 1 19th century 4 2 20th century 4 3 21st Century 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Animated LIDAR data of Worlebury Camp In The Ancient Entrenchments and Camps of Gloucestershire Edward J Burrow mentions that probably either the Goidel or Brython people had initially built the Worlebury Camp 6 The Belgae people subsequently overthrew the initial inhabitants and occupied the camp for a while but they were subsequently eliminated at the hands of the Romans 7 Worlebury Camp has been explored at various times over a period of 150 years From 1851 to 1852 Charles Dymond Edwin Martin Atkins and Francis Warre excavated and surveyed the Worlebury Camp 8 Dymond returned in 1880 to continue the excavation which lasted until 1881 Another century passed before the Woodspring Museum from Weston super Mare excavated more of Worlebury camp in 1987 to 1988 Finally in 1998 the Avon Extensive Urban Study team performed the latest as of 2008 assessment of the site 9 A condition survey undertaken in 2017 18 resulted in a request for an analytical earthwork survey which was undertaken by Historic England in 2018 19 While the survey disclosed some evidence about the use of the hillfort and its later history many questions still remain 10 Location Edit Plan of the camp The fort is located on the summit of Worlebury Hill 109 metres 358 ft above sea level 11 It is in the present day North Somerset above the seaside resort of Weston super Mare 9 and close to the village of Worle 12 Its inhabitants would have had a view of the countryside as well as any potential invaders They would have been able to see out over to Sugar Loaf Mountain the Black Mountains the Mendip Hills Dunkery Beacon Sand Point and Wales 13 This view is no longer as unobstructed as it once was because of the presence of so many trees spread over the hill 14 Archaeological findings EditPlatforms Edit There are a number of triangular platforms on the slopes around the fort The apexes of these triangles are flush with the hillside with the base projecting in the downhill direction However the upper surface is approximately level The front faces of these platforms are about 1 7 metres 5 6 ft above the hillside and they have ditches in front of them to improve their defence In a letter to Warre Atkins theorised that the structures were slingers platforms or archers stations 8 Several sling stones have been found around them offering some credence to the theory that slingers stood upon these platforms Dymond mentions the stones in his book Several of them were broken as though they had been used in the attack on the fort as indeed many of them probably were 8 Charles Dymond Worlebury An Ancient Stronghold in the County of Somerset Walls and ditches Edit An artist s rendition of Worlebury Camp from a book published in 1886 Worlebury Hill is bordered on its northern and western sides by steep cliffs dropping down into the Bristol Channel between Weston Bay and Sand Bay 15 These would have rendered the fort nearly immune to attack from those directions 1 16 Nevertheless the fort still has one wall on its northern side and one on its western side both very near the edge of the cliffs On the south side a single rampart and a ditch guarded the fort The level east side was protected by two stone ramparts and five ditches 8 Parts of these ramparts were over 11 metres 35 ft high measuring from the bottom of the ditch as of 1875 17 The walls of the fort are around 1 metre 3 3 ft thick However because they are made up of dry laid stone the removal of a few stones would be sufficient to bring the entire wall collapsing down To prevent access to the walls themselves the inhabitants of the fort raised large breastworks around the base of the walls by piling up rock rubble against the bases These rubble barriers are over 1 22 metres 4 0 ft high and in places they are over 1 22 metres 4 0 ft thick Attackers would have had to clear away the rubble before being able to attack the wall and all the while they would be under direct fire from defenders on the top of the wall 8 Storage pits Edit Storage pits The area inside the outer wall has a series of hut circles and 93 storage pits cut directly into the bedrock which is only around 60 centimetres 2 0 ft beneath the surface of the soil in most places Eighteen of the Storage pits are in what Dymond calls the keep one is in the transverse fosse a fosse is a ditch usually dug for protection 18 and seventy four of the pits are outside the keep but still enclosed within the exterior walls The average size of the pits is around 2 metres 6 6 ft long by 2 metres wide and 1 5 metres 4 9 ft deep The largest pit is roughly triangular in shape with sides measuring 3 metres 9 8 ft 2 7 metres 8 9 ft and 2 4 metres 7 9 ft long The smallest pit is 1 metre 3 3 ft long by 7 metres 23 ft wide 8 The inhabitants used them to store grain as is evidenced by the kernels of barley and wheat and the sherds of pots that were found in the pits Several of the pits contained the remnants of peas and burned woven baskets In addition researchers also found sling stones and spindle whorls dated to the 1st or 2nd century BC inside them 8 9 A skull found during Dymond s second exploration which is gouged with many cuts from an edged weapon Drawn in 1886 for Dymond s book Worlebury An Ancient Stronghold in the County of Somerset Eighteen of these pits were found to contain the remains of human skeletons which are now stored in the Weston super Mare Museum in Weston super Mare 16 Eighteen full skeletons were found of which ten showed evidence of a violent death including sword cuts in the skulls 19 20 It is possible that the Romans or the Belgic raiders attacked the fort and killed the inhabitants 1 Artefacts Edit A cast copper alloy penannular collar of special interest to archaeologists has been found at the campsite It may indicate that this hilltop site was used even before the Iron Age since related artefacts tend to be found with Bronze Age items and it was the first of its type found in Britain 2 In 2006 a related copper penannular brooch dating to the 5th or 6th century AD was found in a spring between Brecon Beacons and the Black Mountains in Wales A gold penannular bracelet was found in the River Perry 21 Roman coins have been found at Worlebury Camp since the Romans had established a presence by the end of the 1st century AD 22 Many of the Roman coins bear the image of the Western Roman Emperor Honorius This was inside the fort proper Another coin was located by Trinity Path which leads towards the fort 2 Other findings at the site include animal remains including the bones of pigs oxen horses deer goats and even small birds Limpet shells have also been found near the bones Archaeologists found iron objects adding further credibility to the idea that this fort is from the Iron Age These objects include a chisel or borer several spearheads and javelin heads and an iron cone with charred wood inside and a rivet hole through the cone Dymond assumes that this cone was once a plowshare Stone artefacts mainly slingstones and scrapers have been discovered at the site Just less than 36 flint chips have been found of which some may be arrowheads One good quality arrowhead has been found In addition to these Dymond recorded finding a lead lump about the size of a walnut that he decided was probably a sling bullet 8 Glastonbury type bead rim pottery was also found at this site 2 A socketed bronze axe from the late Bronze Age which was found at Worlebury Hill in 1883 is in the Ashmolean Museum 23 Damage to the site Edit 19th century quarry on the south side of the hill seen looking north from South Road 19th century Edit Development of Weston super Mare since the 19th century has resulted in three episodes of potentially irreversible damage to the site A quarry started operation in the southern side of Worlebury Hill in 1815 to mine for galena calamine and stone The Bristol and Exeter Railway arrived in Weston super Mare in 1841 making it profitable to expand the village into a town 2 In 1842 Weston super Mare became a town with the granting of the Improvement and Market Act of May 1842 20 This act also proposed developing houses right over the brow of the hill This would have gone straight through Worlebury Camp however the actual expansion never reached the site By 1853 some development had occurred according to the proposed expansion but it had skirted the hillfort and continued to the east 2 20th century Edit In the early 20th century the Worlebury fort itself was damaged by boys rolling stones including some from the walls of the fort down the hill on which it stands The Axbridge District of the Somerset Archaeological Society was taking steps to prevent such damage from happening again 24 21st Century Edit Some of the trees planted in the early 19th century had become very large and their roots were growing into the archaeological structures In 2005 the Forestry Commission gave permission for North Somerset Council to fell 300 trees to reduce the subsequent risks 25 A member of the North Somerset Council Christopher Richards said If we had a storm up here and these trees came down then the entire hillfort could be destroyed 25 The site was added to the Heritage at Risk Register in 2017 its condition noted as declining 26 A condition survey and an analytical earthwork survey revealed some evidence about the use of the hillfort and its later history but many questions remain 27 In 2020 the council initiated a consultation on plans to remove more thousands of trees to protect the remains 28 See also Edit History portal Somerset portalArcheological site List of hillforts in England List of hillforts and ancient settlements in SomersetReferences Edit a b c Worlebury Camp Roman Britain org Archived from the original on 13 June 2010 Retrieved 5 October 2010 a b c d e f Desk Based Assessment of Land Adjacent to Numbers 2 10 Upper Kewstoke Road Weston Super Mare North Somerset PDF Project PJ 195 Mercian Archaeology Retrieved 16 October 2010 permanent dead link Advice on Potential Landscape Seascape and Visual Impacts of a Severn Barrage PDF Land Use Consultants Archived from the original PDF on 5 June 2014 Retrieved 29 October 2010 Worlebury Camp a large multivallate hillfort on Worlebury Hill Weston Super Mare 1011260 Historic England historicengland org uk Retrieved 28 March 2022 Weston woods LNR Natural England Retrieved 29 October 2010 Burrow E J 1919 The Ancient Entrenchments and Camps of Gloucestershire Cheltemham E J Burrow amp Co Ltd p 18 Palmer L S January June 1921 Some Early British Remains From a Mendip Cave Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 51 211 212 JSTOR 2843521 subscription required a b c d e f g h Dymond Charles William 1886 Worlebury an Ancient Stronghold in the County of Somerset John Wright and Co Printer Stone Bridge a b c Fortified England Worlebury Camp Fortified England Retrieved 7 December 2010 Bowden M 2019 Worlebury Hillfort and the Linear Earthworks to its east Weston super Mare North Somerset Archaeological Survey Report Historic England Research Report 93 2019 research historicengland org uk Retrieved 15 May 2020 British Hills The UK Walking Club Retrieved 23 October 2010 Welcome to the web site of the Worlebury Residents Association Worlebury Residents Association Retrieved 6 November 2010 Weston Woods North Somerset Council Archived from the original on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 29 October 2010 Satellite Map of Worlebury Camp Web based satellite map Map 1 in 50 ft Cartography by Blom Microsoft Retrieved 6 November 2010 PARISH PROFILE Kewstoke Origins Archived from the original on 15 July 2011 Retrieved 30 October 2010 a b Worlebury Camp Megalithic Portal Retrieved 24 January 2010 Journal of the British Archaeological Association British Archaeological Association 1875 p 270 Retrieved 19 December 2010 Fosse Princeton University Retrieved 19 December 2010 Gerry Brooke 1 December 2009 Footsteps into History Worlebury Bristol Evening Post This is Bristol Archived from the original on 5 May 2013 Retrieved 29 October 2010 a b Weston super Mare A Brief History Weston super Mare Retrieved 19 December 2010 Portable Antiques Scheme Annual Report 2006 PDF Dewsbury District Metal Detecting Club pp 31 73 74 Archived from the original PDF on 14 March 2012 Retrieved 9 November 2010 pp 73 74 Rippon Stephen Aalbersberg G Allen J R L Allen S Cameron N Gleed Owen C Davies P Hamilton Dyer S Haslett S Heathcote J Jones J Margetts A Richards D Shiel N Smith D Smith J Timby J Tinsley H Williams H Jones Julie Cameron Nigel Davies Paul Dobinson Simon Gleed Owen Chris Haslett Simon Heathcote Jen Margetts Anthony Smith David Tinsley Heather Williams Huw Aalbersberg Gerard Hamilton Dyer Sheila Timby Jane Shiel Norman Richards David Allen Steven 2000 The Romano British Exploitation of Coastal Wetlands Survey and Excavation on the North Somerset Levels 1993 7 PDF Britannia Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies 31 69 200 doi 10 2307 526920 hdl 10036 19573 JSTOR 526920 Royal haskoning 15 Archaeology and heritage PDF Bristol City Council Retrieved 29 October 2010 Committee on Ancient Earthworks and Fortified Enclosures Report on November 1909 Retrieved 16 October 2010 a b Trees threaten Iron Age hillfort BBC 12 January 2005 Retrieved 29 October 2010 Worlebury Camp a large multivallate hillfort on Worlebury Hill Weston Super Mare North Somerset UA Historic England historicengland org uk Retrieved 15 May 2020 Bowden M 2019 Worlebury Hillfort and the Linear Earthworks to its east Weston super Mare North Somerset Archaeological Survey Report Historic England Research Report 93 2019 research historicengland org uk Retrieved 15 May 2020 Trees to be cleared to preserve Somerset Iron Age fort site BBC News 5 February 2020 Retrieved 5 February 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Worlebury hill fort Worlebury Village Homepage A street map with Worlebury Camp indicated by the arrow A bird s eye view of present day Worlebury Camp This article incorporates material from Worlebury an Ancient Stronghold in the County of Somerset by Charles Dymond a public domain source Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Worlebury Camp amp oldid 1137455052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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