Ancient Monuments

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The eastern of two rectangular enclosures on Great Litchfield Down, SSW of Ladle Hill

A Scheduled Monument in Burghclere, Hampshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.3044 / 51°18'15"N

Longitude: -1.3172 / 1°19'1"W

OS Eastings: 447697.349468

OS Northings: 156362.8217

OS Grid: SU476563

Mapcode National: GBR 834.3T0

Mapcode Global: VHCZY.4G0X

Entry Name: The eastern of two rectangular enclosures on Great Litchfield Down, SSW of Ladle Hill

Scheduled Date: 15 March 1949

Last Amended: 27 September 1995

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1012040

English Heritage Legacy ID: 25621

County: Hampshire

Civil Parish: Burghclere

Traditional County: Hampshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Hampshire

Church of England Parish: Whitchurch with Tufton with Litchfield

Church of England Diocese: Winchester

Details

The monument includes the eastern of two rectangular enclosures of possible
Bronze Age date on Great Litchfield Down. The enclosure lies on the crest of a
ridge running south west from Ladle Hill, c.100m away from the western
enclosure.
The enclosure has dimensions of c.36m (south west to north east) by c.33m. The
banks of the enclosure are not clearly defined, surviving as low mounds
between 1.5m and 2m wide and up to 0.3m high. A band of darker soil
representing an infilled ditch surrounds the enclosure, increasing its overall
dimensions to c.42m by c.36m. There is an entrance c.5m wide in the south
eastern side.

MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.
It includes a 2 metre boundary around the archaeological features,
considered to be essential for the monument's support and preservation.

Source: Historic England

Reasons for Scheduling

Small enclosed settlements dating from the Middle Bronze Age are often
associated with earlier field systems and are known on some sites to have
replaced earlier unenclosed settlements. Enclosures of both sub-rectangular
and curvilinear plan are known; the sites are wholly or partly surrounded by a
ditch, bank or palisade, or by a combination or succession of all three. Where
excavated, sites have usually been found to contain a small group of domestic
buildings sufficient for a single or extended family group, although a few
larger enclosures are known. Evidence of a succession of buildings has been
found on some sites. The buildings are usually circular in plan but occasional
rectangular structures are known. Both types of building would have provided a
combination of living accommodation and storage or working areas. Storage pits
have been recorded inside buildings on some sites but are generally rarely
present. In addition to pottery and worked flint, large quantities of burnt
stone and metal working debris have been found in some enclosures.
Although the precise figure is not known, many small enclosed settlements are
located on the chalk downland of southern England. As a class they are
integral to understanding Bronze Age settlement and land use strategies, while
their often close proximity to the numerous burial monuments in the area will
provide insights into the relationship between secular and ceremonial activity
during the Middle Bronze Age.
A small number of small enclosed settlements survive on downland as visible
earthworks; the majority, however, occur in areas of more intensive
cultivation and survive in buried form, visible only from the air as soil
marks and crop marks. All examples with visible earthworks, and those in
buried form which retain significant surviving remains, are considered to be
of national importance.

Much of the archaeological landscape of Ladle Hill and the surrounding downs
is preserved as earthworks or soil- or crop-marks, which together will provide
a detailed understanding of the nature and development of agriculture, land
use and settlement on the north Hampshire downs. The eastern enclosure on
Great Litchfield Down is part of the wider distribution of monuments of Bronze
Age and later date on the downs and will contain archaeological and
environmental information relating to the construction and use of the
monument.

Source: Historic England

Sources

Other
Ordnance Survey , SU 45NE 23, (1956)

Source: Historic England

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