Cadbury Camp Hill Fort

Local nameCadbury Camp Hill Fort
LocationTickenham, UK

Cadbury Camp is an Iron Age hill fort in Somerset, England, near the village of Tickenham. It is a scheduled monument. Although primarily known as a fort during the Iron Age it is likely, from artefacts, including a bronze spear or axe head, discovered at the site, that it was first used in the Bronze Age and still occupied through the Roman era into the sub-Roman period when the area became part of a Celtic kingdom. The name may mean "Fort of Cador" - Cado being possibly the regional king or warlord controlling Somerset, Bristol, and South Gloucestershire, in the middle to late 5th century. Cador has been associated with Arthurian England, though the only evidence for this is the reference in the Life of St. Carantoc to Arthur and Cador ruling from Dindraithou and having the power over western Somerset to grant Carantoc's plea to build a church at Carhampton. Geoffrey of Monmouth invented the title 'Duke of Cornwall' for Cador in his misleading History of the Kings of Britain.

Tags FortificationArchaeological Site
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More information and contact

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadbury_Camp

Official Website https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/cadbury-camp/

Address BS20 7, United Kingdom

Coordinates 51°26'52.993" N -2°47'21.33" E

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