2011
DOI: 10.1017/s0079497x00000633
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Close to the Edge: New Perspectives on the Architecture, Function and Regional Geographies of the Coastal Promontory Forts of the Castlemartin Peninsula, South Pembrokeshire, Wales

Abstract: Many of Pembrokeshire's 58 coastal promontory forts are iconic and well-known monuments. They occur in a density unparalleled in the rest of Wales. Morphology is highly variable, as is Pembrokeshire's ever-changing coastal geology, from resistant granite in the north to softer limestones and sandstones in the south. New surveys by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (RCAHMW) of three promontory forts on the Castlemartin Peninsula in south Pembrokeshire – Linney Head Camp, Flim… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…Cwm Bach and Whitmore Stairs are similarly precipitous and, even allowing for loss of internal area through coastal erosion, it is difficult to understand them as practicable settlements. Barker and Driver (2011, 82–3) have argued that some of the more precipitous promontory forts in Pembrokeshire were ill fitted for daily life and so could have had ritual or ceremonial purposes rather than domestic functions. A similar interpretation of some promontory forts in the Vale of Glamorgan is possible.…”
Section: The Settlement Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cwm Bach and Whitmore Stairs are similarly precipitous and, even allowing for loss of internal area through coastal erosion, it is difficult to understand them as practicable settlements. Barker and Driver (2011, 82–3) have argued that some of the more precipitous promontory forts in Pembrokeshire were ill fitted for daily life and so could have had ritual or ceremonial purposes rather than domestic functions. A similar interpretation of some promontory forts in the Vale of Glamorgan is possible.…”
Section: The Settlement Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%