Scratchbury Camp Hill Fort

From Hillforts Of The Wylye And Avon Valleys, by the Hillfort Study Group, Salisbury, April 1984:

ST 911442

This fine univallate hill fort is situated on the north side of the Wylye valley overlooking the river just downstream from Battlesbury.

The site is multi-period, though details of the different phases are not yet clear. The earliest known features on the site are five round barrows, three at least of which have been excavated. Recognised since 1812 (Colt Hoare) has been the enclosure in the centre of the subsequent hillfort, which looks D-shaped on account of its butting up against a bank which subdivides the fort. O.G.S. Crawford thought that this earlier enclosure might be a Neolithic causewayed camp, but excavations in 1957 showed it to be earlier Iron Age.

Air photographs seem to show a crop mark continuing the circle to the south-east of the linear bank, so that it seems likely to have been originally near circular. The linear bank which seems to have cut across this enclosure runs south-west to north-east and appears to be overlain by the main hillfort earthwork at the north-east entrance, as well as disappearing under the rampart at the south-west corner. It has been suggested that this may have been the original line decided for the hillfort rampart, and that there was subsequently a change of plan; this could only be shown if excavation were to prove the chronology to be suitable. Whatever the answer, the main hillfort rampart postdates the linear bank, and consists of a single bank and ditch with counterscarp enclosing over 15 hectares.

There are three entrances, in the north-west, north-east and south-east, none of them apparently of great complexity, though the overlapping, passage-style of that in the north-east contrasts with the more direct entry afforded by the other two entrances.

Signs of the quarry ditch are visible in the south-east, while small depressions at the north-west may represent hut sites or pits. Following all this activity a bank cuts off a small section of the southern part of the fort, and presumably dates to the Romano-British period or later.

Stray finds from the fort recorded by Colt Hoare include a jade axe, a ground flint axe and “British and Roman pottery’. A Roman bronze spoon was found in 1804. Trial excavations in 1957 yielded Iron Age pottery from the primary filling of the ditch of the inner enclosure. One of the barrows near the north-east gate produced a cremation, and Cunnington’s 1802 excavation of one of those in the south-west yielded only animal bones and burnt stones. His same-day excavation of the central tumulus was more profitable: the haul was a bronze dagger, bronze pin, a large amber ring and fifty amber beads.

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