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Small enclosed Iron Age settlement and a length of an adjacent hollow way, 350m north west of Beechfield

A Scheduled Monument in Worthen with Shelve, Shropshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 52.645 / 52°38'42"N

Longitude: -3.0354 / 3°2'7"W

OS Eastings: 330043.344093

OS Northings: 305759.416107

OS Grid: SJ300057

Mapcode National: GBR B4.6KC8

Mapcode Global: WH8BW.BST3

Entry Name: Small enclosed Iron Age settlement and a length of an adjacent hollow way, 350m north west of Beechfield

Scheduled Date: 22 June 2004

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1021277

English Heritage Legacy ID: 34945

County: Shropshire

Civil Parish: Worthen with Shelve

Traditional County: Shropshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Shropshire

Church of England Parish: Worthen

Church of England Diocese: Hereford

Details

The monument includes the earthwork and buried remains of a small enclosed
Iron Age settlement and a length of an adjacent hollow way. The settlement is
situated on the top of a spur, at its southern end, from where there are
extensive views of the Rea Brook valley to the south and south west, and the
uplands beyond.

The enclosed settlement is oval in plan. Its overall dimensions are
approximately 120m east-west by 145m north-south. The area defined by the
defences is about 0.5ha, which in the northern half falls steadily from north
to south. The earthwork defences consist of two ramparts constructed of earth
and stone, each bounded by external ditches with an outer (counterscarp) bank
around all of the circuit except to the north east. In several places the
rock-cut face of the inner ditch can still be seen. The defences stand to
their greatest height around the western and southern parts of the circuit.
Here, the combined maximum height of the inner rampart and the depth of the
inner ditch measures 3.2m, while the combined measurement for the outer
rampart and ditch is 2.3m. Around the whole of the circuit the outer ditch
has been infilled and is visible as a shallow depression or as a terrace, and
is defined by the external scarp of the outer bank. The ditch survives as a
buried feature. The outer rampart and outer ditch along the southern side are
partly overlain by a later field boundary bank. On the eastern side, the two
ramparts have been reduced in height by later ploughing. The area of former
cultivation extends across the interior of the settlement and is marked by a
series of cultivation ridges aligned north-south. Also within the interior,
and clearly pre-dating these cultivation remains, are a number of artificially
created platforms, some of which are cut into the sloping ground. These
platforms provided level areas for the construction of houses and ancillary
buildings. A geophysical survey undertaken in 1999 confirmed the presence of
buried structural features within the interior.

The original entrance into the settlement lies on the eastern side, and is
defined by the ends of the outer rampart which turn inward. Next to the
entrance, immediately to the east, is a sizeable linear depression, or hollow
way, which partly cuts through the infilled outer ditch of the settlement. The
hollow way runs around the lower slopes of the spur to the south and then
continues northwards past the settlement. The deep profile of the hollow way
has been formed by the regular passage of people, vehicles and animals over a
considerable time, probably beginning early in the medieval period. The hollow
way forms part of a local network of long-established routeways, and a 40m
length of it adjacent to enclosed settlement is included in the scheduling in
order to preserve this relationship.

All fence posts are excluded from the scheduling, although the ground beneath
them is included.

MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.

Source: Historic England

Reasons for Scheduling

During the Iron Age a variety of settlement types were constructed throughout
Britain. Small enclosed settlements consist of discrete areas of occupation,
bounded largely or wholly by continuous single or concentric ditches, banks or
walls, and palisades. The size of these curvilinear or rectilinear enclosures
is generally less than 2ha. They were occupied by a small community, perhaps a
single family or several related family groups. In their original form the
enclosures contained a single main domestic building, or several clusters of
domestic buildings. These structures are normally circular and are often
associated with rectangular buildings used for the storage of agricultural
produce. Small enclosed settlements became common features in the landscape
during the second half of the first millennium BC. Settlements of this type
continued to be built and occupied throughout the Roman period. They were the
dwelling places of people engaged in small-scale farming and craft production.
Considerable numbers of small enclosed settlements are known, but most have
been levelled by ploughing. All small enclosed settlements where earthwork or
standing structural remains survive are considered to be of national
importance.

Although it has been partially modified by later agricultural activity, the
small enclosed Iron Age settlement 350m north west of Beechfield is a good
example of this class of monument. In common with the other broadly
contemporary settlements overlooking the Rea Brook valley, it is considered
to contain significant buried deposits, structural features and artefactual
and organic remains. These have the potential to illustrate many aspects of
life during the Iron Age. The defences will retain evidence about the nature
of their construction. Organic remains surviving in the buried ground
surfaces beneath the ramparts and the outer bank, and within the ditches, will
provide important information about the local environment and the use of the
surrounding land before the settlement was built and during its occupation.

The adjacent hollow way, as part of a network of long-established routeways,
gives an indication about the movement of goods and livestock during the
medieval period. These routeways are therefore important for understanding the
economic history of this region.

Source: Historic England

Sources

Other
Wigley, A, Walton Camp, 1999: a geophysical survey, 1999, Undergraduate project

Source: Historic England

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