The early Iron Age settlement at Longbridge Deverill Cow Down, Wiltshire
is justly regarded as one of the type sites of the British Iron Age.
During four brief seasons of excavation between 1956 and 1960 Sonia
Chadwick Hawkes investigated three enclosures and revealed the
well-preserved remains of four impressive timber roundhouses. The
Longbridge settlement lay within a landscape of contemporary Iron Age
communities on the northern periphery of Salisbury Plain, and its
particular role and place in this complex of settlements, field systems,
routeways and middens remains tantalisingly obscure. A remarkable
collection of pottery associated with the fiery destruction of the
roundhouses, perhaps immolation in the true sense, offers a wealth of
new material to consider in the light of other important collections
from the region. The release of Hawkes' archaeological data marks a
major contribution to the pursuit of insight into this intriguing phase
of British prehistory. 301p, b/w illus,