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'''Seaton Down''' is a low hill in the easternmost confines of [[Devon]], which is the site of an Iron Age hill fort and of a major find of Roman coins.  The down stand immediately north-west of [[Seaton]], Devon's easternmost coastal place, and reaches 413 feet at its summit.  The fummit is crowned with the earthworks of a hill fort.
'''Seaton Down''' is a low hill in the easternmost confines of [[Devon]], which is the site of an Iron Age hill fort and of a major find of Roman coins.  The down stand immediately north-west of [[Seaton, Devon|Seaton]], Devon's easternmost coastal place, and reaches 413 feet at its summit.  The fummit is crowned with the earthworks of a hill fort.


==The fort==
==The fort==

Latest revision as of 20:31, 7 November 2020

Seaton Down
Devon

Seaton Down and the Holyford valley
Summit: 413 feet SY234918
50°43’18"N, 3°5’9"W

Seaton Down is a low hill in the easternmost confines of Devon, which is the site of an Iron Age hill fort and of a major find of Roman coins. The down stand immediately north-west of Seaton, Devon's easternmost coastal place, and reaches 413 feet at its summit. The fummit is crowned with the earthworks of a hill fort.

The fort

The hill fort takes the form of an earthwork with a large linear rampart cutting a promontory of land at the north-east end of the down off as a defensive fortification. It is slightly unusual in this layout when compared with other forts in the area.[1]

The Seaton Down Hoard

The Seaton Down Hoard was found on the hill in November 2013 by a metal detectorist. It is a hoard of 22,888 Roman coins, making it one of the largest ever found in Britain.[2][3][4]

The coins were found near the site of a Roman fort and possible villa in Honeyditches which was built in the second to third century.[5][6] The coins date from AD 260 to 348.[7] The coins are made from copper-alloy. The hoard is one of the largest ever found of 4th-century coins in what had been the Roman empire and consist of coins from the reign of Roman emperor Constantine I and his family in AD 306 and the joint reign of Constantius II and his younger brother Constans, from AD 337 to 340.

The Royal Albert Memorial Museum in Exeter acquired the coins in July 2016.[8][9]

Coins from the hoard were displayed at the British Museum on 25 September 2014.[10]

References