Little Woodbury: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 51°03′01″N 1°47′20″W / 51.05026°N 1.78881°W / 51.05026; -1.78881
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'''Little Woodbury''' is the name of an important [[Iron Age]] [[archaeological site]] near [[Salisbury]] in the [[England|English]] county of [[Wiltshire]].
'''Little Woodbury''' is the name of an important [[Iron Age]] [[archaeological site]] near [[Salisbury]] in the [[England|English]] county of [[Wiltshire]].


It was partially excavated between [[1938]] and [[1939]] by [[Gerhard Bersu]], a German [[archaeologist]] who introduced the revolutionary approaches he had developed in continental Europe before being driven to Britain by the [[Nazism|Nazis]]. He was commissioned by the [[Prehistoric Society]] to excavate the site in order to improve knowledge of early British settlement sites which were until then poorly understood.
It was partially excavated between 1938 and 1939 by [[Gerhard Bersu]], a German [[archaeologist]] who introduced the revolutionary approaches he had developed in continental Europe before being driven to Britain by the [[Nazism|Nazis]]. He was commissioned by the [[Prehistoric Society]] to excavate the site in order to improve knowledge of early British settlement sites which were until then poorly understood.


A settlement had been identified at the site through [[aerial archaeology]] by [[OGS Crawford]] almost 20 years previously. He had seen a circular enclosure as a [[cropmark]] and it was identified for further excavation as a possible source of information on everyday prehistoric Britain.
A settlement had been identified at the site through [[aerial archaeology]] by [[OGS Crawford]] almost 20 years previously. He had seen a circular enclosure as a [[cropmark]] and it was identified for further excavation as a possible source of information on everyday prehistoric Britain.

Revision as of 00:15, 4 January 2009

Little Woodbury is the name of an important Iron Age archaeological site near Salisbury in the English county of Wiltshire.

It was partially excavated between 1938 and 1939 by Gerhard Bersu, a German archaeologist who introduced the revolutionary approaches he had developed in continental Europe before being driven to Britain by the Nazis. He was commissioned by the Prehistoric Society to excavate the site in order to improve knowledge of early British settlement sites which were until then poorly understood.

A settlement had been identified at the site through aerial archaeology by OGS Crawford almost 20 years previously. He had seen a circular enclosure as a cropmark and it was identified for further excavation as a possible source of information on everyday prehistoric Britain.

Bersu dug a network of parallel trenches, one after the other across the site. Through this methodology, he was able to identify a large roundhouse and several other domestic features. The postholes of the roundhouse enabled Bersu to argue that these structures were the common domestic building type of the Iron Age, prior to his work it was thought that people lived in holes in the ground. Through Bersu's identification of animal bone and cereal grains, he convinced other archaeologists to re-evaluate these large holes they found as storage pits.

When war broke out in 1939, work stopped and Bersu was interned on the Isle of Man. He never returned to the site and post-excavation work was never fully completed. The results from Little Woodbury however served to influence generations of archaeologists to take an interest in the day-to-day life of ancient peoples and the roundhouse has become a regular feature in interpreting prehistoric sites.

External links

51°03′01″N 1°47′20″W / 51.05026°N 1.78881°W / 51.05026; -1.78881