This volume describes the two seasons of excavation at Segsbury Camp
which form a part of Oxford University's Hillforts of the Ridgeway
Project . It contains background material and a series of
interpretations of the site at different scales finishing with a
discussion of the Lambourn Downs landscape in later prehistoric and
Romano-British times. The evidence suggests that the large hillfort of
Segsbury was used during the period 6th to 2nd century BC but was not
densely and permanently occupied. It also seems that Segsbury was
constructed in a new and previously unused area of the Downs.
Alternative interpretations are explored within a framework of trying to
understand what is meant by 'community' and how Segsbury interacted with
other hillforts in the area. The detail provided by the excavation of
several hillforts on the Lambourn Downs suggests that they were
different forms of monument and argues against trying to understand
hillforts as a single category.