Mount Caburn

Mount Caburn
Mount Caburn

Mount Caburn is a 480-foot (146m) isolated peak, one of the highest landmarks in East Sussex, England, about one mile (1.6 km) east of Lewes overlooking the village of Glynde. It is an isolated part of the South Downs, separated by Glynde Reach, a tributary of the River Ouse.

Contents

Enclosure

On the summit of Caburn are the remains of an Iron Age hill fort. The hill fort has been repeatedly excavated, by Augustus Pitt Rivers (1877–78), the Curwens (1925—26), the Curwens again (1937–38), and latterly by the Sussex Archaeological Society (1996–98).[1] It may be the most excavated site in Britain, with no fewer than 170 trenches.[2]

Pollen records (from peat at the southern base) indicate that prior to 2000 BC, the hill was covered with dark yew woodlands.[3] The fact that a single Neolithic leaf-shaped arrowhead is the only pre-Bronze Age finding on Caburn, despite the extent and duration of excavations, suggests that there was little permanent occupation then.[2]

The summit was initially enclosed in the middle Iron Age (c.400 BC), with a deep v-shaped ditch and a bank of dumped spoil. Originally the ditch was 8m wide at the top, 2.7m deep, and enclosed an area of 1.9 ha.[4]

Since before the first excavations, it has been assumed that this enclosure was defensive, making a conventional hill fort. However the most recent excavators have challenged this assumption, arguing instead that the site was a religious enclosure, rather than a military fort or fortified farmstead. They point to the contents of the small pits, the insubstantial rampart, and its weak defensive attributes.[1]

There are over 140 burial pits on Caburn; some are circular, some triangular and some rectangular. Each pit was found to be full of artefacts. Deposits included weapons, tools, pottery, coins, querns, and disarticulated human and animal bones.[5] The most recent excavators argue that these are not random, or mere domestic rubbish, but are structured deposits and appear 'ritually charged'. The NE corner of the enclosure seemed to have special significance, because the high-status objects were mostly deposited there.[1]

Outside the original rampart, on the northern side, there is a great ditch cut into the chalk. This is the side most vulnerable to attack.

This outer ditch has long been assumed to be a late Iron Age (re-)fortification, perhaps in response to the threat from Rome.[6] That assumption has now been disproved. The excavation of trenches through the chalk dump (the spoil had been dumped in the adjacent valley instead of being used to build a bank) and a small internal bank turned up Romano-British pottery. Therefore the outer ditch is Romano-British or later, perhaps a Saxon measure against Viking raids.[2]

Use

Caburn has only been reoccupied sporadically since the great northern ditch was built, at the Norman Conquest and during Stephen's reign.[7]

It appears that the Caburn was densely grazed during the Roman period, when the hill slopes around were a patchwork of rectangular ploughed fields. Then the hill probably returned to scrub. But by the Norman Conquest the Caburn was heavily grazed and the hill slopes were ploughed into strips. Both the Roman rectangular fields and the medieval strips are still visible today.[4]

Over later centuries the dominant agricultural activity became sheep grazing. It was on Caburn and other local pastures that John Ellman reared his famous breed of Southdown sheep.

During the Second World War two slit trenches and a three-sided Bren position were dug into Caburn as part of a 'stop-line' to defend against invasion.[2]

Conservation and recreation

Mount Caburn is now legally protected. It lies within the Lewes Downs SSSI (designated in 1953) and the Mount Caburn National Nature Reserve was established in the mid-1980s. It has been designated a Special Area of Conservation as an example of orchid-rich chalk grassland. It is home to a good population of stonechats.

Caburn is unusual within the South Downs for having a south-facing scarp slope. The site has the largest British population of burnt-tip orchid. There is also the rare small-leaved sweet-briar, and the typical fragrant and pyramidal orchids. Invertebrates include Adonis and chalk-hill blue butterflies and the scarce forester moth. Populations of stonechats live in scrubby bushes such as gorse near the golf club and in the valley below, along with other song birds such as blue tits. Herring gulls and carrion crows often fly overhead and hundreds of domestic sheep graze the area. There is a sheltered cave with a water trough where lost sheep can rest safely if they stray away from the flock on a dark night when the farmer is rounding up the animals.

Caburn is a popular site for paragliding, being used when the wind is from south south-east to west-south-west.

Arts

In fiction Caburn appears as Wealden Hill in the novel of the same name by Graeme K Talboys. Caburn also features prominently in the novels and short stories of John Whitbourn (e.g.'The Royal Changeling' and 'Bury My Heart At Southerham (East Sussex)'. Caburn also appears in the children's story Elsie Piddock Skips in Her Sleep, (first published in 1937) by Eleanor Farjeon.

The Caburn by J. Lambert, 1783

Caburn has been a favourite subject of painters and illustrators for centuries.[8]

Name

It has only been called Mount Caburn since the end of the 18th century. The origins of the name are disputed.

  • It has long been suggested that Caburn may come from Caer Bryn (Welsh - Stronghold hill)
  • A rival explanation is that it was originally Calde burgh (Old English - Cold Fort - 1296), then Mount Carbone (late 18th century).
  • Some local accounts allege that by the 18th century it was called Carber, and before that it was called Calborough Hill.[9]


Notes

  1. ^ a b c Drewett, P., and Hamilton, S., 1999: Marking time and making space: Excavations and Landscape Studies at the Caburn hillfort, East Sussex, 1996–98. Sussex Archaeological Collections, 137: 7-37.
  2. ^ a b c d Drewett, P., and Hamilton, S., 2001: Sacred mount or classic hillfort? Current Archaeology, 174: 256-262
  3. ^ M.P. Waller and S. Hamilton. 2000. Vegetation history of the English chalklands: a mid-Holocene pollen sequence from the Caburn, East Sussex. Journal of Quaternary Science, 15, 253-272.
  4. ^ a b English Nature, 2002: Five Thousand Midsummer Days: the Caburn, its people and wildlife.
  5. ^ Russell, M., 2006: Roman Sussex. Tempus. p60
  6. ^ e.g. Drewett, P., Rudling, D., Gardiner, M., 1988: The South-East to AD 1000. Longman. p155
  7. ^ Hampden. A., 1997: A glimpse of Glynde. The Book Guild. p1
  8. ^ See Carolyn Trant's article on the Caburn from an artist's point of view in Molyneaux, B.L. ed (1997) The Cultural Life of Images. Routledge.
  9. ^ Lusted, A., 1989: A pit-worker's story. Glynde Archivist 9.

Coordinates: 50°52′43″N 0°2′5″E / 50.87861°N 0.03472°E / 50.87861; 0.03472


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Mount Caburn — noun A hill located just east of the town of Lewes in the county of Sussex in the United Kingdom …   Wiktionary

  • Caburn — noun a) Mount Caburn. b) deriving from the hill in Sussex, mainly found in the city of Brighton …   Wiktionary

  • List of Nature Conservation Review sites — The following is a list of sites listed in Derek Ratcliffe s 1979 book A Nature Conservation Review . The headings, subheadings, site codes and site names are the same as those used in the original work.Coastlandsoutheast Englandouth west… …   Wikipedia

  • Monk's House — For the extra parochial place in Northumberland, see Monks House, Northumberland. The front of Monk s house Monk s House is an 18th century weatherboarded cottage located in the village of Rodmell, three miles (4.8km) south east of Lewes, East… …   Wikipedia

  • Monk’s House — Vorderansicht von Monk’s House Monk’s House ist ein Cottage aus dem 18. Jahrhundert in Rodmell, 4,8 Kilometer südöstlich von Lewes, East Sussex, England gelegen. Die Schriftstellerin Virginia Woolf und ihr Mann, der Journalist und Verleger… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Devil's Punch Bowl — For other uses, see Devil s Punch Bowl (disambiguation). The valley seen from north of Hindhead The Devil s Punch Bowl is a large natural amphitheatre and beauty spot near Hindhead, Surrey, in England, and is the source of many stories about the… …   Wikipedia

  • A27 road — UK road routebox road= A27 length mi= length km= direction= West East start= Whiteparish (near Salisbury, Wiltshire) destinations= Southampton Portsmouth Havant Chichester Bognor Regis Worthing Brighton and Hove Lewes Newhaven Eastbourne end=… …   Wikipedia

  • Glynde and Beddingham — Infobox UK place official name=Glynde and Beddingham country=England region=South East England static static image caption= area footnotes= inc Tarring Nevillecite web |url=http://www.eastsussexinfigures.org.uk/webview/ |title=East Sussex in… …   Wikipedia

  • Cissbury Ring — is a hill fort on the South Downs, in the borough of Worthing, and about 5 kilometres (3 mi) from its town centre, in the English county of West Sussex. Plan of Cissbury fort showing shafts of flint mines Contents …   Wikipedia

  • Southease — Infobox UK place official name=Southease country=England region=South East England static static image caption= area footnotes= Rodmell Southeasecite web |url=http://www.eastsussexinfigures.org.uk/webview/ |title=East Sussex in Figures… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”