Cherbury Camp
Cherbury Camp | |
Berkshire | |
---|---|
Cherbury Camp | |
Type: | Hill fort |
Location | |
Grid reference: | SU374963 |
Location: | 51°39’51"N, 1°27’38"W |
History | |
Built Iron Age | |
Information |
Cherbury Camp is a multi-vallate hill fort-like earthwork in the north of Berkshire. It is found in the Vale of White Horse a mile to the north of the village of Charney Bassett. The site itself is connected to the village by a footpath.
History and legend
This appears to be an Iron Age fortification but is far away from any hill or other vantage point. It is, nonetheless, larger than its counterpart, Uffington Castle, on the nearby Berkshire Downs. The surrounding area was likely to have been marshy, so the site may have had strategic importance. In structure and unusual siting, it resembles nearby Hardwell Castle.
Legend has it that the local garrison of Uffington Castle marched the intervening six miles to raid Cherbury Camp, where King Canute and his invading army were encamped. However, a young shepherd boy spotted them and blew his horn as a warning to the Danes. They are said to have consequently prevailed in the subsequent battle, which took place at the crossroads halfway between Charney Bassett and Buckland. The area became known as Gainfield as a result. The shepherd boy was granted all the land within the sound of his horn, around Pusey, as a reward for his vigilance.
However true or otherwise this local legend may be, the horn, known as the Pusey Horn, is now housed in the Victoria and Albert Museum. There was also once an inn in Charney Bassett, called the Horn Inn. It was closed during the Second World War.
Excavation
An archaeological excavation was carried out at Cherbury camp in the late 1930s. The report on this was published in Oxoniensia. A geophysics survey was conducted in 2007.