Martin Down Enclosure facts for kids
Looking north-west acress the site
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Location | Martin Down, Hampshire |
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Coordinates | 50°58′47″N 1°56′24″W / 50.97972°N 1.94000°W |
History | |
Periods | Bronze Age Romano-British |
Designated | 20 October 1936 |
Reference no. | 1010870 |
The Martin Down Enclosure is an archaeological site on Martin Down, near the village of Martin, in Hampshire, England. It is near the boundaries with Dorset and Wiltshire.
The site is a scheduled monument, and it is one of several archaeological features on Martin Down, such as Bokerley Dyke.
The enclosure is the original example of a type of prehistoric feature, the "Martin Down style enclosure": they are small enclosures of the Bronze Age, area often less than 0.3 hectares (0.74 acres), considered to be domestic settlements. They have mostly been found on downland of central southern England, usually situated on hillsides. Other examples are on Harrow Hill and Thundersbarrow Hill, both in West Sussex, and on Shearplace Hill in Dorset.
Description
There was excavation by Augustus Pitt Rivers from November 1895 to March 1896. He excavated all of the bank and ditch, and about half of the interior; the present earthwork is his reconstruction. It was concluded that the site is middle Bronze Age, with later Romano-British occupation. Finds from the excavation included worked flint, animal bone and pottery of the Bronze Age and Romano-British period.
The rectangular enclosure has internal dimensions of about 90 metres (300 ft) south-west to north-east by 63 metres (207 ft). It has a single bank of width up to 10 metres (33 ft) and up to 0.7 metres (2 ft 4 in) above the interior, and there is an external ditch. There is a gap (established as original during the excavation) at the eastern end of the north side, width about 40 metres (130 ft), and there are entrances on the east and south sides.