Whitsbury Castle

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Whitsbury Castle

Wiltshire

Whitsbury castle geograph-1869831-by-Mike-Faherty.jpg
The outermost ditch of Whitsbury Castle
Type: hillfort
Location
Location: 50°58’34"N, 1°49’9"W
History
Information
Owned by: private

Whitsbury Castle, or Whitsbury Castle Ditches, is the site of an Iron Age univallate hillfort located near the village of Whitsbury in Wiltshire. The fort is roughly pear-shaped, located on a chalk outcrop, and covering approximately sixteen acres. The defences comprise two large ramparts with outer ditches and an additional counter scarp bank on the northern half.[1]

The original entrance was at the south-western corner but has been destroyed by the construction of a post-mediæval manor house. The site has been in use throughout the ages, with excavation revealing Mesolithic activity, an association with a Bronze Age ranch boundary, an Iron Age hillfort settlement, followed much later by Anglo-Saxon renovation and reuse of the defences.[2] The site is privately owned but is flanked externally on all sides but east by public bridleways.

The site is listed as a scheduled ancient monument.[3]

References

  1. http://www.hants.gov.uk/hampshiretreasures/vol05/page317.html Hampshire Treasures website
  2. Megalithic Portal: Whitsbury Castle
  3. National Heritage List 1020316: Whitsbury hillfort (Scheduled ancient monument entry)