There are so many hillforts in Wales that their 'architecture' and designs seem to be infinitely varied. In fact, dominant cultural traditions appear to have influenced the construction and design of at least some of the larger hillforts, while recurrent themes in the layout of entranceways, and the positioning and orientation of key defences, can be observed. This article argues for a fresh look at the subject of hillfort architecture and function in Wales and for long-held preconceptions to be challenged. In-depth analysis of individual sites and local groups of hillforts is discussed in preference to generalised national narratives
The Iron Age in temperate Europe is characterized by the emergence of hillforts. While such sites ca...
Moving away from the highly regionalised and constrained purely humanistic and empirical studies of ...
This volume describes work on the Iron Age hillfort of Lodge Hill Camp, in Gwent, south-east Wales.S...
Iron Age settlement in Wales is dominated by defended settlements, ranging in size from large multiv...
Only one of the hillforts of southern Gwynedd has been submitted to a small excavation, and the fort...
NoFollowing Wheeler's excavations at Maiden Castle, the multivallate hillforts of Wessex came to be ...
An outline of types and dating of hillforts in north-west Wales is presented together with the types...
Historical excavation of hillforts, largely pre-1970, is reviewed critically through selected cases ...
"The origins of this volume lie in research undertaken for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the...
Dinas Powys hillfort is the richest, best preserved and most fully excavated early medieval secular ...
Hillforts represent the largest and arguably most impressive archaeological monuments in the Irish l...
This article considers some of the ways that monuments and sites that receive statutory protection (...
The variability of Wessex hillfort form, use and development has long been noted, but not satisfacto...
Reproduced with permission of the publisher.Medieval town defences represent a somewhat neglected ar...
The (re)occupation of hillforts was a distinctive feature of post-Roman Europe in the fifth to seven...
The Iron Age in temperate Europe is characterized by the emergence of hillforts. While such sites ca...
Moving away from the highly regionalised and constrained purely humanistic and empirical studies of ...
This volume describes work on the Iron Age hillfort of Lodge Hill Camp, in Gwent, south-east Wales.S...
Iron Age settlement in Wales is dominated by defended settlements, ranging in size from large multiv...
Only one of the hillforts of southern Gwynedd has been submitted to a small excavation, and the fort...
NoFollowing Wheeler's excavations at Maiden Castle, the multivallate hillforts of Wessex came to be ...
An outline of types and dating of hillforts in north-west Wales is presented together with the types...
Historical excavation of hillforts, largely pre-1970, is reviewed critically through selected cases ...
"The origins of this volume lie in research undertaken for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the...
Dinas Powys hillfort is the richest, best preserved and most fully excavated early medieval secular ...
Hillforts represent the largest and arguably most impressive archaeological monuments in the Irish l...
This article considers some of the ways that monuments and sites that receive statutory protection (...
The variability of Wessex hillfort form, use and development has long been noted, but not satisfacto...
Reproduced with permission of the publisher.Medieval town defences represent a somewhat neglected ar...
The (re)occupation of hillforts was a distinctive feature of post-Roman Europe in the fifth to seven...
The Iron Age in temperate Europe is characterized by the emergence of hillforts. While such sites ca...
Moving away from the highly regionalised and constrained purely humanistic and empirical studies of ...
This volume describes work on the Iron Age hillfort of Lodge Hill Camp, in Gwent, south-east Wales.S...