Ivinghoe Beacon... - Buckinghamshire County Council
Transcription
Ivinghoe Beacon... - Buckinghamshire County Council
Ivinghoe Beacon... land of the dead How to get to Ivinghoe By bus: By road: 61 from Aylesbury/Tring/ Luton. Walk up hill from the B489/ village By road: B489 from the A41 between Aylesbury and Watford or from the A4146 between Hemel Hempstead and Leighton Buzzard. Turn onto the Beacon Road from the B489 just to the north of Ivinghoe itself. Park in the National Trust car park. Turn right out of the car park to head towards the beacon (1) and hillfort (2). At the highest point inside the hillfort was a good place for a beacon. Beacons were set up to pass news of an invasion when Britain was at war in the 17th and 18th centuries. The beacon was moved to Ivinghoe church. The hill seems to have been occupied from the Late Bronze Age as pottery and metalwork from this date was found in excavation in the 1960s. The ramparts were not built until the Early Iron Age, however, and the settlement was abandoned soon after. A street and some house platforms were found in a survey to the north outside the ramparts. Oxford Archaeology This map is reproduced from Ordnance Survey material with the permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office © Crown copyright. Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. Buckinghamshire County Council Licence No. 100021529 2007. Route Map of Ivinghoe On your way you will see several round barrows, which are also visible inside the hillfort (3). The large mound in the north-west corner of the hillfort is an Early Bronze Age burial mound. There are others on the way back to the car park. They pre-date the hillfort so it is interesting that a settlement would be sited so close to funerary monuments. You can turn right out of the hillfort to walk down the ridge of the hill to another round barrow. From the hillfort, start back to the car park but at the road go across for a short way on a footpath on the other side. This crosses Late Bronze Age or Early Iron Age cross-dykes and hollow-ways of a possibly similar date (4). This map is reproduced from Ordnance Survey material with the permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office © Crown copyright. Unauthorised reproduction infringes Crown copyright and may lead to prosecution or civil proceedings. Buckinghamshire County Council Licence No. 100021529 2007. This part of Grim’s Ditch is not part of the main system but is a similar monument, a set of paired linear banks and ditches that seem to carve the landscape up into areas, perhaps for grazing. The inhabitants of the hillfort did not seem to grow crops, but did keep animals like cattle and sheep. Go back to the road, cross-over and turn right to get back to the car park. Produced for the County Archaeological Service, Buckinghamshire County Council, County Hall, Aylesbury, HP20 1UY For more information visit: http://ubp.buckscc.gov.uk Information from: Articles in Records of Buckinghamshire 24, pp107-17 & 144-70 & 30, pp123-55. All images copyright of Buckinghamshire County Council unless otherwise stated. © 85JJ design by Communications Design Team, a not for profit service, Buckinghamshire County Council 01296 382717 designteam@buckscc.gov.uk