Register here - as a registered user you get more features and fewer ads.
Another name for the site is Caer Rhain.
The fort was a rough rectangle enclosing some 17½ acres. It has a bank, ditch and counterscarp bank with in-turned entrances south-east and the south-west, the latter with an outwork. The bank rises to five metres and averages 4½ metres along its length. The ditch has been destroyed on the west and north sides although a path follows its line.
Pottery found on the site indicates it was permanently occupied from the 2nd century BCE until after the Roman Conquest. The interior of the camp is wooded and a path leads up to its highest point where there is a triangulation point – rather redundant given the density of the trees.
Something is not right. This message is just to keep things from messing up down the road


