
Excavations in the two Iron Age Hill-Forts on Castle Hill, Capel, near Tonbridge, 1965 and 1969-71
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The Cathedral Priory of St. Andrew, Rochester
The Old Chantry House, Bredgar
Excavations in the two Iron Age Hill-Forts on Castle Hill, Capel, near Tonbridge, 1965 and 1969-71
EXCAVATIONS IN THE TWO IRON AGE HILL-FORTS
ON CASTLE HILL, CAPEL, NEAR TONBRIDGE,
1966 AND 1969-71
By J. H. MONEY, M.A., F.S.A.
lN'.1.'ROl>UC'.1.'lON
CASTLE Hn.L (N.G.R. TQ 608439), in the parish of Capel, lies 2 miles
(3 ·2 km.) south-west of the centre of Tonbridge (Fig. 1).
The O.S. 6-inch map of 1872 gives no indication that the earthworks
on Castle Hill had by then been discovered. This map, however, refers
to Castle Hill and Castle Hill Woods, which suggests a tradition that
the place had onoe been fortified. On the top of the hill the map shows
a cleared area of much the same size as it is today; this clearing was
scheduled as grassland in 1849 when the estate was purchased by
Somerhill. According to Winbolt the earthworks did not appear on
the O.S. 6-inch map until 1912. It is not known whetl1er or not the
fortifications survived in the area of grassland in or after 1849, but
they had certainly been demolished before Winbolt's excavations of
1929,1 when the field was arable.
It was no doubt the destruction of the defences in the arable field
which misled Winbolt into assuming that there was only one fort, and
this is what he showed on his plan, using field boundaries of no great
age to link the visible remains of what were two separate fortifications.
Winbolt found a few flint artefacts and some iron slag, which were
deposited in the Tonbridge Public Library but have since been lost.
In the east entrance (of what is now called Fort I, see Fig. 1) he recognized
a roadway paved with ironstone no dules and what he calls
'sandstone slats', and revetting stones along its sides. In other respects
his report is of little or no value.
Credit for detecting the existence of two separate earthworks goes
to the late Mr. E. Geary, field investigator in the Archreology Division
of the Ordnance Survey,2 who in 1969 recorded (of what is now called
Fort II): 'On the south-west of the spur is a kidney-shaped enclosure,
with the characteristics of an Iron-Age contour fort, formed by a
rampart and outer ditch. The north-east side is under plough but has
slight indications of a causewayed entrance'. These details, including
the ploughed-out north-east defences, were added to the O.S. maps.
Geary also gives a description of the visible remains of Fort I, and
1 S. E. Winbolt, 'Castle Hill Ca.mp, Tonbridge', Arch. Cant., xli (1929), 193-5.
1 O.S. Record Card.
61
J. H. MONEY
comments: 'The true nature of this earthwork is uncertain; it does
cut off the promontory but its defensive value is negatived by the
weak flanking slopes . . . It may be an unfinished work, possibly a
later strengthening of the contour fort.'
In 1964, I was asked by the Inspectorate of Ancient Monuments to
keep an eye on construction work preparatory to the erection of the
television mast which stands at TQ 607440 just outside the north-west
corner of Fort I. The work took place in May and June 1965 (see pp. 64-5
below).
I had already decided to explore selected parts of the earthworks,
in the hope of solving some of the outstanding problems; the excavations
which took place in 1969, 1970 and 1971 are described below.8
ENVIBONMENT, GEOLOGY A.ND DATE
The two forts (Fig. 1) are situated on a spur of high ground running
from north-east to south-west, around 400 ft. above sea level. Although
the natural slopes are nowhere very steep, the site commands the
surrounding area, and from it the inhabitants would have been able to
exercise direct control over the ridge between Tonbridge (TQ 5845)
and Pembury (TQ 6240)-a natural north-west to south-east route
which the A21 follows today. They would also have been able to
exercise indirect control over the crossing of the River Medway at
Tonbridge, where the valley is narrowest and which has thus always
been a vital point on an important north-south route across the
Weald.4 A track (now partly demolished by clearance work beside the
A21) descends from the entrance of Fort I in a northerly direction.
Winbolt marks5 another track (of which traces still survive) running
similarly south-east. If ancient, as seems possible, these tracks would
have linked the fort with, or may indeed have been, the north-west to
south-east ridgeway.
Castle Hill is on an outcrop of Lower Tunbridge Wells Sand.
Wherever we dug, the sandstone was encountered a short distance
below the land surface. As well as providing a reasonably dry base for
the occupiers, the sandstone also facilitated the digging of steep-sided
ditches and provided good material for ramparts and revetments.
A number of worked flints and waste material of mainly Mesolithic
type came to light during the excavations (see Appendix: B): also
three late Neolithic sherds (Appendix: A). There were no concentrations
3 Interim reports a,re in Arch. Oant., Jxxxiv (1969), 233-4; lxxxv (1970),
176-7; Jxxxvi (1971), 233--4; and lxxxvii (1972), 219.
'This route (Cr.oss-in-Hand-Mark Cross--Frant-Tunbridge WellsSoutbborough-
Tonbride-Ightham) and its context are described in I. D.
Marge.ry, Roman Ways in the Weald, 2nd Edition, London, 1949, 258, 259, 264
and 265.
1 Op. cit. in n.l, 194.
62
EXCAVATIONS AT CASTLE RILL, TONBRIDGE
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