Toothill Fort Explained

Toothill Fort
Alternate Name:Toothill Ring, or Camp
Map Type:Hampshire
Coordinates:50.966°N -1.4579°W
Epochs:Iron Age
Public Access:on private land

Toothill Fort, or Toothill Ring, or Toothill camp, is the site of an Iron Age univallate hill fort located in Hampshire. The site occupies an extremely strong position at the north end of a spur. Its defences comprise a single rampart and ditch with traces of a counterscarp bank in places. There is an additional scarp on the north side up to 2.0m in height where the site is weakest. The original entrance is onto the ridge to the south.[1]

The name "Toot hill" literally means lookout hill (similar to "Tout" in Dorset). The site is very heavily wooded. The redwoods planted in the middle of the hill fort make the hill even more of a landmark for many miles around.

Location

The site is located at, and between the towns of Southampton and Romsey, in the county of Hampshire. The M27 motorway passes close by to the south of the site. The hill has a summit of 84m AOD.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hampshire Treasures Volume 9 (Test Valley South) Page 105 - Nursling and Rownhams . . 2006-03-29 . Hampshire Treasures . . 2010-10-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160425205219/http://www.hants.gov.uk/hampshiretreasures/entries/v09p105e01.html . 2016-04-25.