Ladle Hill

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Ladle Hill
Hampshire
Ladle-Hill-geograph-306526-by-Andrew-Smith.jpg
Ladle Hill
Range: Hampshire Downs
Summit: 761 feet SU477568
51°18’31"N, 1°18’54"W

Ladle Hill iclimbs to 761 feet above sea level in the Hampshire Downs, in the north of Hampshire. It is on on Great Litchfield Down, to the southeast of the village of Old Burghclere, and to the west of Kingsclere.

On the summit is an apparently unfinished hill fort, along with a saucer barrow, a disc barrow and sections of two linear earthworks: this site is a scheduled ancient monument.[1]

On the hill slopes, 26 acres have been designated a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Hampshire.[2]

Nearby to the west lies Beacon Hill and to the immediate east is Watership Down. The A34 runs between the Ladle Hill and Beacon Hill to the east. The site and surrounding downs are easily accessible by public footpath, including the nearby cross county footpath, Wayfarer's Walk.

Archaeology

Earthworks at Ladle Hill
3D view of the digital terrain model

The hillfort on the top of the hill has never been excavated,[3][4] but the land and ditch are sharply defined and well preserved. This Iron Age fort is roughly rectangular and enclosed seven acres within an embankment and ditch. There are two probable entrances to the east and west. The work seems to have been undertaken by several different labour forces, each working on a section of the defences, but for some reason the task was abandoned and the fort left unfinished. A disc barrow 170 feet in diameter lies just to the north, and there are several other barrows in the area, mostly ploughed-out.[1][5]

The unfinished hillfort

Ladle Hill is perhaps the best known of all of the unfinished hillforts in Britain.[6] It was first correctly identified as an unfinished hillfort and described in detail by the archaeologist Stuart Piggott in 1931. The site has been invaluable to help archeologists understand the methods employed in the creation of Iron Age date univallate enclosures, with the partially constructed nature of the site revealing features that would normally be concealed in a completed example, such as for possible setting-out ditches, and piles of chalky soil initially quarried from the ditch and deposited in the interior for finishing the rampart.[7]

At Ladle Hill it has long been suspected that the area demarcated by the unfinished earthworks never actually contained a settlement, although there is a possibility that the hillfort was to be constructed over an earlier unenclosed settlement. Magnetometer surveys from 1997 shows none of the variation normally associated with former occupation sites on chalk geology, and this would seem to confirm that a settlement with typical Iron Age characteristics, such as storage pits, was never established within the boundary of the earthwork.[7]

The earthworks were intended to enclose an area of approximately 8½ acres and was marked by a slight ditch, or possibly an earlier palisaded enclosure. Apart from the dumps of material associated with the abandoned construction works, the interior has very few other earthworks of intelligible character.[7]

A dewpond, with the earthworks behind

Surrounding area

By contrast the surrounding areas contain a number of features of interest, including a linear ditch that runs along the crest of the west-facing escarpment of Great Litchfield Down and Ladle Hill, and is approximately 2,000 yards in length. It ends at a slight spur overlooking the valley floor barrow cemetery of Seven Barrows. For half a mile or so of its visible southern course, this earthwork also forms the western boundary of a large field system on Great Litchfield Down. This field system does not extend northwards as far as Ladle Hill.[7]

Immediately to the east of the unfinished hillfort is another linear ditch, not overlain by the hillfort, which is approximately 800 yards in length, finishing at the head of a coombe below Hare Warren Down. To the east of this linear ditch is another large field system, visible both as areas of earthworks and as soil and crop marks on aerial photographs.[7]

To the southwest of Ladle Hill are two sub-square earthwork enclosures, each of approximately three-quarters of an acre. Both are undated, but a possible link exists between such enclosures, linear ditches, and areas of probable grazing during the time of the late Bronze Age to early Iron Age transition.[8] The features surrounding Ladle Hill are beyond the northern limit of the known field system on Great Litchfield Down and west of the fields on Hare Warren Down and Nuthanger Down. The unfinished hillfort therefore appears to be in an atypical Wessex location, being very close to major linear earthwork features, and in an area without an existing field system.[7]

Immediately to the north of Ladle Hill lies a well preserved disc barrow, some 170 feet in diameter. Just beyond this there is evidence for traces of platforms that may represent the remains of an unenclosed settlement.[9] This feature has never been surveyed in detail and although an open settlement is possible it may be that these are features of other disturbance such as localized surface quarrying.[7]

Within the northern half of the camp there are traces of a small, low mound, approximately ten feet in diameter, thought to be a disc barrow, but magnetometer surveys did not show any trace of a surrounding ditch. The mound today is hardly discernible, but early aerial photographs of the site taken in around 1929 show that the mound was better preserved at the time of Piggott's original surveys in the first half of the 20th century.[7]

Roman features

Sited on the steep west slope of the hill is a Roman earthwork, formed by the erection of a substantial bank on the down hill side of the slope. It may have been a small circus or pond.

Wildlife

The flora and fauna on the hill have been recognised to be of particular importance, and is such that the hill was designated as a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in 1978. Ladle Hill typifies a calcareous grassland chalk downland habitat now scarce in Britain, and is home to some unusual and rare species. The earthwork in particular is very rich in species, with a good range of downland grasses and large populations of rare and local plants such as field fleawort, Senecio integrifolius; chalk milkwort, Polygala calcarea; hairy rock-cress, Arabis hirsuta; fragrant orchid, Gymnadenia conopsea; and pyramidal orchid, Anacamptis pyramidalis. The earthwork escarpment slopes, though species-rich, support fewer species than within the fort, but some, notably clustered bellflower, Campanula glomerata, only occur there.[2]

The site is also importance for its population of the rare July flowering form of the burnt-tip orchid, now only on a few sites in Britain.[2]

The hill also supports salad burnet, thyme, fairy flax ( Linum catharticum) and hairy violet (Viola hirta). There is some scattered scrub on the north-facing slope but there does not appear to be on-going encroachment.[2]

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References

  1. 1.0 1.1 National Heritage List 1012038: An unfinished hillfort, a saucer barrow, a disc barrow and sections of two linear earthworks on Ladle Hill (Scheduled ancient monument entry)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 SSSI listing and designation for Ladle Hill
  3. Williams-Freeman, 1915, 87-9, 380
  4. Piggott, 1931, Antiquity 5, 474-85
  5. Ladle Hill: The Modern Antiquarian
  6. Feacham 1971
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 "The wessex hillforts project: extensive survey of hillforts in central southern England", Andrew Payne, Mark Corney and Barry Cunliffe, published by English Heritage, 15/09/2006, ISBN 978-1-873592-85-4
  8. Cunliffe 1991, pg38
  9. Piggott 1931

Bibliography

  • Feacham, R W (1971) "Unfinished Hillforts", in Jesson, M and Hill, D (eds) The Iron Age and its Hillforts: papers presented to Sir Mortimer Wheeler. Southampton, pages 19–40
  • Piggott, S (1931) "Ladle Hill – an unfinished hillfort", Antiquity 5, pages 474–85
  • Cunliffe, B (1991) Iron Age Communities in Britain: an account of England, Scotland and Wales from the Seventh Century BC until the Roman Conquest, 3rd edition, London.