Cadbury Hill
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Cadbury Hill | |
---|---|
Elevation | 81 m (266 ft) |
Location | North Somerset, England |
Prominence | 26 m |
Topo map | OS Landrangers 171, 172 |
OS grid reference | ST442649 |
Cadbury Hill, as the name suggests, is a small hill, mostly in the civil parish of Congresbury, overlooking the village of Yatton in North Somerset. On its summit stands an Iron Age hill fort.
[edit] Archaeology
The hill fort is known, in archaeological circles, as Cadbury-Congresbury in order to differeniate it from the Cadbury hillfort in South Cadbury. It appears to have been constructed in the Iron Age when one or more ramparts, with walls and ditches, were built on the steep slopes of the hill to defend an area covering some eight and a half acres. The remains Iron Age round houses may still be seen inside. The hill fort was refortified on a very minor scale around 400 and occupation extended into the sub-Roman period, from which much imported pottery has been recovered. It has been suggested that this was the monastery of Saint Congar after whom Congresbury was named.[1]
[edit] Folklore
There is a local legend that states that the hill is inhabited by the ghost of a Roman legionary.
[edit] References
- ^ Alcock, Leslie (1971). Arthur's Britain. London: Allen Lane: The Penguin Press. ISBN 0-71390-245-0.