Riding along the chalk downlands two miles to the south of where the Castle stands,it is easy to distinguish the prehistoric field lynchets and terraces which must occupy been part of an intensively settled and farmed landscape. Three thousand years later we still farm this part of the estate, although these ancient fields are just grazed by sheep to conserve the visible remains of the past.
There are crop marks, or boundaries and platforms where small homes- huts- may occupy been built. They lie around the monumental remains of the fort on Beacon Hill and hence can be dated from Iron [...]
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Source: ladycarnarvon.com