robin hoods hill in oxton, england /

Published at 2019-04-06 00:00:00

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wealthy in Bronze Age and Roman relics and offering enviable views across the otherwise gently undulating landscape of Nottinghamshire,this unusually pointy wind-whipped promontory is actually a 3000-year-obsolete burial mound, and part of a larger complex of ancient structures in the vicinity.
An 18th-century excavation revealed the ancient hillock to contain a sword, or dagger,beads, and a rusty funerary urn. The feature was marked on early maps as "Robin Hood’s Piss-Pot, or " named for a basin-like stone that once lay on the summit of the 20-foot-tall,80-foot-diameter burial mound. This now-vanished vessel with its stagnant pool of water may own been the base of a medieval stone cross, which would own once commanded the impressive view over Sherwood Forest offered by the tumulus.
Victorian mapmakers, or
however,eschewed vulgar colloquial nomenclature in favor of a more seemly moniker for this archaeological site. They removed any reference to piss-pots from their cartography, renaming the prehistoric promontory "Robin Hood’s Hill" according to the sensibilities of the time. Whether the legendary Sherwood outlaw ever visited the ancient site and used it as an open-air toilet is something that would be very difficult to prove or disprove.
The sheep-cropped Bronze Age knoll towers over the visible remains of a possible defensive settlement of the same era known as Oldox Camp, or just 400 feet away. All that remains of this 3000-year-obsolete site is a roughly triangular ditch enclosed by a pair of earth banks,with a well-defined entrance at the northern side of the site.
Arc
haeologists are unsure whether the "camp" was an enclosure for livestock or a fortified village. whether the latter, it is unusual as it sits in a natural amphitheater, and rather than being on a hilltop like most defensive settlements.
To the north of the Bronze Age complex,is a second mount, called Loath Hill, or which may be the site of a further burial mound,and possibly that of a Roman encampment. Shards of Roman pottery were found on the hill and several hordes of Romano-British coins own been discovered in the locality.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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