British Camp

From Wikishire
Revision as of 11:21, 30 January 2016 by FixerBot (talk | contribs) (clean up, typos fixed: Indeed → Indeed,)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
British Camp (left)

British Camp is an Iron Age hill fort located at the top of Herefordshire Beacon in the Malvern Hills. The hillfort is protected as a Scheduled Ancient Monument and is owned and maintained by Malvern Hills Conservators. The fort is thought to have been first constructed in the 2nd century BC. A Norman castle was built on the site.

The extensive earthworks remain clearly visible today and determine the shape of the hill.

The height of the summit of British Camp is 1,110 feet.

Situation

The British Camp is composed of extensive earthworks that have been compared to a giant wedding cake. The hillfort on Midsummer Hill is a mile south of the British Camp. There are a number of generally round hut platforms on the British Camp, which may well suggest a permanent occupation. However it is unusual to have two major hillforts within such a short distance.

The diarist John Evelyn (1620–1706) remarked that the view from the hill was "one of the godliest vistas in England".[1]

Structure of the Iron Age fort

The central earthworks

The ditch and counterscarp bank around the entire site covers three hills, although those to north and south are little more than spurs. With a perimeter of 6,800 feet, the defences enclose an area of around 44 acres.[2] The first earthworks were around the base of the central hill otherwise known as the citadel. At least four pre-historic phases of building have so far been identified. Original gates appear to have existed to east, west and north-east.

The Roman Era

There is no evidence about whether the coming of the Romans ended the use of the British Camp. Folklore has it that the ancient British chieftain Caractacus made his last stand here. This is unlikely, according to the description of the Roman historian Tacitus who implies a site closer to the river Severn. Excavation at Midsummer Hill, Bredon Hill and Croft Ambrey all show evidence of violent destruction around 48 AD, at the coming of the Roman legions, and this may suggest that the British Camp was abandoned or destroyed around the same time.

The Castle

Mediæval castles were sometimes built within earlier sites, reusing the earthworks of Iron Age hill forts for instance as was the case at British Camp.[3] A ringwork and bailey castle, known as Colwall Castle as well as The Herefordshire Beacon, was built within the Iron Age hill fort,[4] probably in the ten years immediately before 1066. Quite possibly the builder was Earl Harold Godwinson, the future King Harold II of England. Earl Harold is recorded as building another fortress in the county at Longtown Castle. The castle would appear to have been refortified during The Anarchy of the reign of King Stephen. Before 1148 the fortress was held by Waleran de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Worcester. The castle appears to have changed hands again in 1151 and 1153 when attacked by royalists. At this time it was defended by the men of Earl Waleran's brother, Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester. The castle was finally destroyed by King Henry II in 1155.

The castle is mentioned in passing by William Langland before 1386.

The Shire Ditch

The Shire Ditch, or Red Earl's Dyke, runs north and south of the British Camp along the ridge of the hills. It was created in 1287 by Gilbert de Clare, the Earl of Gloucester, following a boundary dispute with Thomas de Cantilupe, the Bishop of Hereford.[5] Recent research has shown that the Shire Ditch might actually be much older. Indeed, there is some evidence that it may have started life as a prehistoric trackway running from the hillfort on Midsummer Hill to the Worcestershire Beacon, the highest hill in the range over three miles to the north of the Camp.

The dyke, as the name suggests, runs along the boundary of Herefordshire with Worcestershire.

Folklore

A popular legend tells that Caractacus, a British tribal chieftain, fought his last battle against the Romans at the British Camp and goes on to say that after his capture he was taken to Rome where he was given a villa and a pension by Emperor Claudius.

However, the description by Tacitus, the Roman historian makes this unlikely:

[Caratacus] resorted to the ultimate hazard, adopting a place for battle so that entry, exit, everything would be unfavourable to us and for the better to his own men, with steep mountains all around, and, wherever a gentle access was possible, he strewed rocks in front in the manner of a rampart. And in front too there flowed a stream with an unsure ford, and companies of armed men had taken up position along the defences.[6]

If the river in question is the River Severn, the battle was not at British Camp, for though the Severn is visible from British Camp, it is about 5 miles from it. A number of locations have been suggested for Caractacus's battle, including sites near Brampton Bryan, an important Roman site, or Church Stretton which also has an Iron Age fort on Caer Caradoc Hill.[7]

Outside links

References

  1. Smart 2009, p. 15
  2. Price 1881, p. 323
  3. Higham & Barker 1992, p. 61
  4. King 1983, p. 204
  5. Palmer, R. 1992, The Folklore of Hereford and Worcester. Oxford University Press
  6. Tacitus, The Annals, translated by A. J. Woodman, 2004; see also Church & Brodribb's translation
  7. "Megalithic site". http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=4931. Retrieved 20 May 2009. 

Sources

  • Higham, Robert; Barker, Philip (1992). Timber Castles. London: B. T. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-2189-4. 
  • King, David J. Cathcart (1983). Catellarium Anglicanum: An Index and Bibliography of the Castles in England, Wales and the Islands. Volume I: Anglesey–Montgomery. Kraus International Publications. 
  • Price, F. G. Hilton (1881). Camps on the Malvern Hills. 10. Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 319–331. 
  • Smart, Mike (2009). Malvern Hills. Frances Lincoln Ltd. ISBN 9780711229150. 

Books

  • Children, G; Nash, G (1994) Prehistoric Sites of Herefordshire Logaston Press ISBN 1873827091
  • Remfry, Paul Martin (1996). The Herefordshire Beacon, 1048 to 1154. SCS Publishing. ISBN 1899376321. 
  • Remfry, Paul Martin (2008). The Herefordshire Beacon and the Families of King Harold II and the Earls of Hereford and Worcester. Castle Studies Research & Publishing. ISBN 1-899376-73-5.