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From Bronze Age Enclosure to Saxon Settlement (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R626
Discovery Miles 6 260
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From Bronze Age Enclosure to Saxon Settlement (Hardcover)
Series: Thames Valley Landscapes Monograph
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Recent excavations at Taplow Court have revealed a long sequence of
activity stretching from the Mesolithic to the Anglo-Saxon period.
Mesolithic struck flints and charred hazelnuts, and early Neolithic
flints, were found in a small number of tree-throw holes. A group
of inter-cutting hollows or shallow pits of Early Bronze Age date
included sherds of Collared Urn and worked flint, rare evidence of
domestic activity of this period. There were also finds of the
middle Bronze Age, although no features of that phase were
confirmed. In the late Bronze Age, a defensible hilltop enclosure
about 1.2 ha was constructed on the site. The enclosure, probably
first established in the 11th century cal BC, had a complex
sequence of defences including a pair of post-rows possibly
indicating a timber palisade backed by a raised walkway, a
trench-built palisade, a ditch and rampart and further
posthole-lines outside the ditch. Only a limited area of the
interior was examined, but includes a series of parallel fence
lines, one probable roundhouse and up to five possible four-post
structures, with occupation extending into the 9th century cal BC.
Following a probable hiatus in activity represented by a standstill
deposit in the upper part of the ditch, a larger U-profiled
hillfort ditch was constructed in the Early Iron Age, probably in
the 5th century cal BC, the spoil being dumped over the previous
ditch to form a timber-laced rampart, which was soon after
destroyed in places by fire. The remains of the charred timbers
within the rampart have revealed some details of its construction.
The ditch however remained open into the Saxon period, and another
internal roundhouse may be Middle Iron Age. A third and even larger
V-profiled ditch was found outside the second ditch. Although the
date of construction of this outer ditch is uncertain, it too
remained open into the Saxon period, suggesting that the hillfort
had many ditches its later stages. Price is approximate.
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