roughly 20-100 square meters, depending on the size of the hill.
no
J. D. Hill has written: 'The Iron Age project' -- subject(s): Study and teaching, Handbooks, manuals, Iron age, Britons, Antiquities, Archaeology 'Multi-storey car parks' -- subject(s): Automobile parking
Bronze Age people/Settlers often housed themselves within hillforts. It is a fortification on a hilltop.A hill fort is a type of earthwork used as a fortified refuge or defended settlement, located to exploit a rise in elevation for defensive advantage. They are typically European and of the Bronze and Iron Ages.hal_macgregor.tripod.com :- A link to an image of a bronze age hillfort (google)
Two points that should be emphasised:there are many places in England that are called "Caesar's Camp" and none of them have anything to do with Julius CaesarNone of the places with that name are castles, but the one at Folkestone had a later castle built on top of it."Caesar's Camp" near Folkestone in Kent was originally an Iron Age hill fort, later converted into a castle during the medieval period. The earth and timber castle was built shortly after the Norman invasion in 1066 and it has almost destroyed all traces of the earlier hill fort. The castle was still in use in 1137 but must have fallen into disuse shortly after that date."Caesar's Camp" near Aldershot in Hampshire is another Iron Age hill fort."Caesar's Camp" at Bracknell in Berkshire is an excellent example of an Iron Age contour fort, with earth walls following the contours of the hills and valleys around its edge. It has never been excavated so no exact date is attributed to it."Caesar's Camp", Sandy, Bedfordshire is yet another Iron Age hill fort.All of these places were built by the Ancient British tribes before the Roman conquest of Britain; some were abandoned long before that time. They had rings of earth embankments with deep ditches in between, with walls of sharpened poles along the tops of the banks. Very often there were thatched round-houses within the forts, which served as places of refuge, secure grazing for animals and centres of trade.
In British legend, Camelot was the capital of the kingdom of King Arthur. Cadbury Castle in Somerset, an isolated Iron Age hill fort, is the site most often identified with Camelot. Archaeological evidence confirms that during the 6th century the fort was occupied by a powerful British warrior chieftain. However, local folklore advances alternative sites at Camelford in Cornwall and Winchester in Hampshire as the original Camelot.
After the Iron Age was the Middle Ages
After the Iron Age was the Middle Ages
What do iron age people make
The Iron Age in Europe is typically divided into the Early Iron Age (800-500 BC), the Middle Iron Age (500-100 BC), and the Late Iron Age (100 BC - 400 AD). These dates may vary depending on the region being studied.
the stone age used different resources . the stone age used stone and the iron age used iron
Yes. Age 40 is considered "Over The Hill"
The Stone Age occurred before the Iron Age. The Stone Age is divided into different periods (such as the Paleolithic, Mesolithic, and Neolithic), during which early humans used stone tools, while the Iron Age followed when humans began to work with iron tools and weapons.