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Treffie
12-27-2008, 04:36 PM
Oldish news now, but I thought I'd post it anyway.

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'Hidden' Iron Age fort uncovered

The full extent of a hill fort likened to an Iron Age "Millennium Stadium" has been uncovered by investigators.

Gaer Fawr hillfort at Guilsfield, near Welshpool, Powys, is effectively hidden by woodland, making it impossible to appreciate the scale of it.

Detailed survey by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales produced a computer model of the site which dates from around 800BC.

The fort features in the BBC Wales programme Hidden Histories on Tuesday.

Gaer Fawr is one of several hillforts overlooking the upper Severn valley.

The forest covers 5.8 hectares (21 acres) with up to five lines of ramparts over 8m (26ft) high and is now covered in woods.

The Royal Commission's digital terrain model allows the hillfort and its setting to be visualised and makes it clear that Gaer Fawr was constructed in many phases.


After a few centuries of building this site, people who controlled it would have hoped it would be quite terrifying
Dr Toby Driver

It originated as a small summit-fort and additional space was enclosed later as well as two highly-developed entrance-ways created with graded approach ramps and defended gateways.

An annexe was also added to the south.

One feature uncovered in the survey is a bank dividing the interior space, possibly associated with early medieval occupation.

Building work on the fort probably began around 800BC and would have continued for about four centuries.

Dr Toby Driver, aerial investigator for the Royal Commission, told BBC Wales' news website many of the people who visited the fort site, which is owned by the Woodland Trust, would have been unaware what the "lumps and bumps they were walking on" actually were.

He said the construction and scale of the site made it comparable to a modern edifice like the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.

"The timber required alone for the ramparts would have stripped woodland for miles around so it gives an idea of the land it controlled.

"It would have been an unusual site and quite outstanding. After a few centuries of building this site, people who controlled it would have hoped it would be quite terrifying.

"It's tricky to estimate population - the best analogy is that it is like a small town.

"Maybe a few hundred people would have been living there.

"It would have had a chiefly residence and would have run markets monthly, and would have had farms surrounding it."

He added it took surveyor Louise Barker about three weeks to complete the physical survey of the area, which was then converted to a computer model by digital mapper Tom Peat.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/7720287.stm

TheGreatest
12-27-2008, 05:16 PM
It's amazing how things can degrade and be hidden after centuries of abandonment. For a long time, a lot of people assumed those ''hills'' were just hills.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumulus

Treffie
12-27-2008, 05:21 PM
^Mid-Wales is very mysterious, it's a sparsely populated area with a few towns and villages scattered here and there. I've driven along the roads in this area hundreds of times and I've always wondered what else is hidden there.

Albion
01-20-2011, 08:48 PM
^Mid-Wales is very mysterious, it's a sparsely populated area with a few towns and villages scattered here and there. I've driven along the roads in this area hundreds of times and I've always wondered what else is hidden there.

Yes, most people forget about Mid-ales in favour of Snowdonia and Pembrokeshire when much stunning scenery lies in the centre of the country and its quieter too, not as many people to spoil the sense of isolation as you get in North Wales or the Peak District / Lake District.

Anyway its great to hear they've found another piece of Wales' history and hopefully it can be preserved.