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    Hillforts At War: From Maiden Castle to Taniwaha p¿

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    Publication date
    2007
    Author
    Armit, Ian
    Keyword
    Bronze Age
    Europe
    Symbolics
    Archives
    Excavation
    Symbol
    Fittings
    Corral
    Enclosure
    Wessex
    Iron Age
    Hillfort
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    Peer-Reviewed
    Yes
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Following Wheeler's excavations at Maiden Castle, the multivallate hillforts of Wessex came to be seen as responses to a specific form of warfare based around the massed use of slings. As part of the wider post-processual 'rethink' of the British Iron Age during the late 1980s and 1990s, this traditional 'military' interpretation of hillforts was increasingly subject to criticism. Apparent weaknesses in hillfort design were identified and many of the most distinctive features of these sites (depth of enclosure, complexity of entrance arrangements, etc) were reinterpreted as symbols of social isolation. Yet this 'pacification' of hillforts is in many ways as unsatisfactory as the traditional vision. Both camps have tended to view warfare as a detached, functional, and disembedded activity which can be analysed in terms of essentially timeless concepts of military efficiency. Consideration of the use of analogous structures in the ethnographic record suggests that, far from being mutually exclusive, the military and symbolic dimensions are both essential to a more nuanced understanding of the wider social role of hillforts in Britain and beyond.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3762
    Version
    No full-text available in the repository
    Citation
    Armit, I. (2007). Hillforts At War: From Maiden Castle to Taniwaha p¿. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. Vol. 73, pp. 25-37.
    Link to publisher’s version
    http://direct.bl.uk/bld/PlaceOrder.do?UIN=222241650&ETOC=RN&from=searchengine
    Type
    Article
    Collections
    Life Sciences Publications

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