Exprts map UK and Ireland's hill forts

Blackleaf

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The locations and details of all ancient hill forts in the UK and Ireland have been mapped in an online database for the first time.

Scientists found 4,147 sites - ranging from well-preserved forts to those where only crop marks are left.

Researchers from the University of Edinburgh, University of Oxford and University College Cork spent five years on the project.

Nearly 40% are in Scotland, with 408 in the Scottish Borders alone.

Experts map ancient hill forts of UK and Ireland


22 June 2017
BBC News


Castle Law hill fort, Perth and Kinross. Almost 40% of the hill forts of the UK and Ireland are found in Scotland

The locations and details of all ancient hill forts in the UK and Ireland have been mapped in an online database for the first time.

Scientists found 4,147 sites - ranging from well-preserved forts to those where only crop marks are left.

Researchers from the University of Edinburgh, University of Oxford and University College Cork spent five years on the project.

Nearly 40% are in Scotland, with 408 in the Scottish Borders alone.

Information on all the hill forts has been collated onto a website that will be freely accessible to the public so they can discover details of the ancient sites they see in the countryside.

The University of Edinburgh's Prof Ian Ralston, who co-led the project, said: "Standing on a windswept hill fort with dramatic views across the countryside, you really feel like you're fully immersed in history.

"This research project is all about sharing the stories of the thousands of hill forts across Britain and Ireland in one place that is accessible to the public and researchers."


Brown Caterthun near Edzell, Angus. Sometimes only vegetation marks and remnants of the forts show where they once stood

Prof Gary Lock, from the University of Oxford, said it was important the online database was freely available to researchers and others, such as heritage managers, and would provide the baseline for future research on hill forts.

He added: "We hope it will encourage people to visit some incredible hill forts that they may never have known were right under their feet."


Old Bewick hill fort, Northumberland

In England, Northumberland leads the way with 271 hill forts, while in the Republic of Ireland, County Mayo and County Cork each have more than 70 sites.

Powys is the county with the most hill forts in Wales, with 147 and, in Northern Ireland, County Antrim has the most, with 15.

Hill forts were mostly built during the Iron Age, with the oldest dating to around 1000 BC and the most recent to 700 AD, and had numerous functions, some of which have not been fully discovered.


Hill fort near Alyth, Perth and Kinross. The researchers have found 4,147 sites across the UK and Ireland

Despite the name, not all hill forts are on hills, and not all are forts, the experts said.

Excavations show many were used predominantly as regional gathering spots for festivals and trade, and some are on low-lying land.

The research team from the University of Edinburgh, University of Oxford and University College Cork were funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council to gather information from citizen scientists.

About 100 members of the public collected data about the hill forts they visited, identifying and recording the characteristics of forts, which was then analysed by the team.


Maiden Castle hill fort in Dorset

Experts map ancient hill forts of UK and Ireland - BBC News
 

Curious Cdn

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Our ancestors must have endured a lot of tough times or all of those fortifications wouldn't have been necessary.
 

Blackleaf

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Our ancestors must have endured a lot of tough times or all of those fortifications wouldn't have been necessary.

Despite their name, not all were built on hills and not all were forts. Many were used as gathering sites for religious or trade purposes, that were probably famous all around the British Isles, where thousands of people from all around the British Isles would have gathered and met and lit fires and cooked meat on the fires and drank and chatted and performed religious rituals or traded goods. You can imagine them eating amd drinking and enjoying themselves late inbto the night as large bonfires burned.
 

Blackleaf

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That they were built on hilltops tells me that they were meant to be defensible.

Not all of them were built on hilltops. Many were for ceremonial purposes and seemed to have been meeting areas for large groups of people for religious or trading purposes.