Wandlebury Hill Fort Explained

Wandlebury Hill Fort, also known as the Wandlebury Ring, is an Iron Age hillfort located on Wandlebury Hill in the Gog Magog Hills, Cambridgeshire, England, to the southeast of Cambridge. Now a country park, it was the most important of three hillforts in the downs.

Geography

Of the three hillforts Cherry Hinton being one of them, Wandlebury was the most important.[1] The site altitude is above sea level. There are at least two theories regarding why the Wandlebury Hill Fort was built on this site: it may have been chosen because of its tactical grounds, or because it would be the last fortress in a line which controlled the Thames-Stort-Cam Valley route.[2] Wandlebury overlooked the ancient Icknield Way. The meeting point of the hundreds of Thriplow, Chilford, and Flendish is adjacent to Wandlebury.[3]

History

The first hillfort was constructed in about 400 BC, consisting of "a substantial outer ditch and an inner rampart bank of chalk rubble and soil, enclosing a circular area of about 6 ha."[4] A second ditch and bank circuit was added on the inner side of the first rampart in the 1st century BC, and a low counterscarp bank added around the perimeter. The inner ring had a wooden palisading to deter invaders.[5]

Wandlebury was a border settlement.[6] There is evidence that it was occupied by the Romans.[4] The Romans built a road from Worts Causeway to Wandlebury.[7] Two pottery sequences have been found establishing two separate construction phases.[8] It may have been inhabited into the 1st century AD. It was later named Wendlesbiri (meaning, "Waendal's fort") by the Anglo Saxons and used as a Hundred council rendezvous point. Sir Thomas Malory mentions a Wandesborow Castle in Le Morte d'Arthur (1470), possibly referring to the Wandlebury Ring.[9] The site has undergone considerable change since the 17th century.[10] When a house, garden and racing stable was built for King James II within the boundaries of the old fort in 1685, the inner rampart and ditch were levelled.[4] The mansion was later owned by Lord Godolphin and demolished in 1956, but the stable remains.[11] The site is now a country park.

In 1976, a study called "An Integrated Astronomical Complex of Earthworks at Wandlebury and Hatfield Forest from the Third Millenium B.C." was published. The study by C. A. E. O'Brien was an attempt to prove that Wandlebury Ring was far older than previously thought and that the hill fort was built on an existing structure. O'Brien provided evidence that Wandlebury Ring was an astronomical structure (perhaps a huge calendar) similar to Stonehenge and Avebury stone circle, and was possibly engineered by the same team of mathematicians/astronomers. O'Brien also reported evidence of a loxodrome (a line following the angle of the Earth), marked with monoliths, running from Wandlebury Ring to the earthworks at Hatfield Forest.[12] Aspects of O'Brien's study were challenged in an article in the Journal of Geomancy.[13]

Legend and literature

The fort and surrounding hills are shrouded in legends. Gervase of Tilbury said in his Otia Imperialia of 1214:[9]

A knight named Osbert once tested the story and legend has it that he appeared in full armour and defeated the knight who appeared to him but was wounded in the thigh by his opponent's javelin on departing.[9] This is mentioned in Sir Walter Scott's 1808 poem Marmion featuring King Alexander III jousting with a goblin knight.[9]

References

52.1581°N 0.1847°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Boyd, Stephanie. The Story Of Cambridge. 20 July 2012. 16 January 2005. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-62897-6. 9.
  2. Book: Fox, Sir Cyril Fred . The Archaeology of the Cambridge Region. 21 July 2012. 1923. CUP Archive. 139–. GGKEY:6CH6DA0FZWK.
  3. Book: Reynolds, Andrew. Anglo-Saxon Deviant Burial Customs. 21 July 2012. 1 June 2009. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-954455-4. 111–.
  4. Web site: Wandlebury Hill Fort - Myths and Legends. Cambridge Past, Present & Future. 20 July 2012.
  5. Book: Rouse, Mike. A View into Cambridgeshire. 20 July 2012. 1 April 1974. T. Dalton. 15.
  6. Book: Lethbridge, Thomas Charles. Gogmagog: the Buried Gods. 21 July 2012. 1957. Taylor & Francis. 69–. GGKEY:65Q7BXY9A71.
  7. Book: Palacios, Julian. Syd Barrett and Pink Floyd: Dark Globe. 20 July 2012. 12 October 2010. Plexus. 978-0-85965-431-9. 25.
  8. Book: Cunliffe, Barry W.. Iron Age Communities in Britain: An Account of England, Scotland and Wales from the Seventh Century BC Until the Roman Conquest. 21 July 2012. 10 January 2005. Psychology Press. 978-0-415-34779-2. 102–.
  9. Book: Chainey, Graham. A Literary History of Cambridge. 20 July 2012. 27 July 1995. CUP Archive. 978-0-521-47681-2. 4–5.
  10. Book: Garrett, Martin. Cambridge: A Cultural and Literary History. 20 July 2012. 2004. Signal Books. 978-1-902669-79-3. 2.
  11. Book: More Money, Honey! Is It All Really Worth It?: "Behind the Gates". 20 July 2012. PublishAmerica. 978-1-4626-3456-9. 58.
  12. Behrend . Michael . Review . Journal of Geomancy . 1 . 3 . April 1977.
  13. Sylvia P. . Beamon . William A. . Clark . An Examination of O'Brien's Wandlebury Theories . Journal of Geomancy . 2 . 4 . July 1978.