With contributions by Michael J. Allen, Phil Austin, Alistair Barclay, Alex Bayliss, Martin Bell, Robert Berstan, Lisa Brown, Catherine Chisham, Alison Cook, Mark Copley, Michael Cowell, Timothy Darvill, Richard Evershed, Jonathon Hather, Hillary Howard, Su Johnson, Glynis Jones, Robin Kenward, Moira Laidlaw, A. J. Legge, F. G. McCormac, J. I. McKinley, Stuart Needham, Alastair Oswald, Rog Palmer, C Bronk Ramsey, Michael Richards, Fiona Roe, Alan Saville, Isobel Smith, Rachael Seager Smith, Bob Smith, Elizabeth Somerville, Andrew Stott, and Nick Wells, and principal illustrations by Silvia Stevenson and John Borland.
E-book (PDF) published 2013.
A programme of excavation and survey directed by Roger Mercer between 1974 and 1986 demonstrated that Hambledon was the site of an exceptionally large and diverse complex of earlier Neolithic earthworks, including two causewayed enclosures, two long barrows and several outworks, some of them defensive. The abundant cultural material preserved in its ditches and pits provides information about numerous aspects of contemporary society, among them conflict, feasting, the treatment of the human corpse, exchange, stock management and cereal cultivation. The distinct depositional signatures of various parts of the complex reflect their diverse use. The scale and manner of individual episodes of construction hint at the levels of organisation and co-ordination obtaining in contemporary society. Use of the complex and the construction of its various elements were episodic and intermittent, spread over 300-400 hundred years, and did not entail lasting settlement. As well as stone axe heads exchanged from remote sources, more abundant grinding equipment and pottery from adjacent regions may point to the areas from which people came to the hill. If so, it had important links with territories to the west, north-west and south, in other words with land off the Wessex Chalk, at the edge of which the complex lies. Within the smaller compass of the immediate area of the hill, including Cranborne Chase, field walking survey suggests that the hill was the main focus of earlier Neolithic activity. A complementary relationship with the Chase is indicated by a fairly abrupt diminution of activity on the hill in the late fourth millennium, when the massive Dorset cursus and several smaller monuments were built in the Chase. Renewed activity on the hill in the late third millennium and early second millennium was a prelude to occupation on and around the hill in the second millennium in the mid to late second millennium, which was followed by the construction of a hillfort on the northern spur from the early first millennium. Late Iron Age and Romano-British activity may reflect the proximity of Hod Hill. A small pagan Saxon cemetery may relate to settlement in the Iwerne valley which it overlooks.
Author(s): Roger Mercer, Frances Healy
Series: English Heritage Archaeological Reports
Publisher: English Heritage
Year: 2008
Language: English
Pages: xxiii+816
City: Swindon
Contributors viii
Acknowledgements x
Summaries xiii
The archive xvi
Note on the use of radiocarbon determinations xvi
Volume 1
1. Introduction 1
2. The field survey 15
3. Excavations 41
4. Interpreting chronology 378
Volume 2
5. Molluscan and sedimentary evidence for the palaeoenvironmental history of Hambledon Hill and its surroundings 412
6. Charcoal and charred plant remains 454
7. Human remains and diet 477
8. Livestock and Neolithic society at Hambledon Hill 536
9. Pottery and fired clay 587
10. Lithics 630
11. In conclusion 744
Colour plates
Bibliography 781
Index 800