T. E. Lawrence’s Undergraduate Dissertation – Page 56
T. E. Lawrence’s Undergraduate Dissertation
Page 56
ditches cut in solid chalk like those of old Sarum,were to
all intents and purposes walls, and no one would require
further defences : but ditches in earth were often, in stony
places, strengthened by a wall on their inner face. In
places this wall is very formidable and disposed in the
manner of Iliad XII, 258, as at Worlebury in Somerset
(Plan 8) though this seems to have been occupied in pre-
Roman times. Where the soil was suitable the earthworkers
often faced their vallum with retaining walls of stone.(Plan 8)
Caesar describes the Gauls as building walls of mixed
timber and stone : these of course would be too perishable
to have survived, though at Murcens, above the valley of
the Lot, there is a much-dilapidated camp with timber ties
in a dry stone wall.
All that can be said of earthworks in the present
state of our knowledge is that they all, almost without
exception, show "concentric" plans. Old Sarum is almost
a perfect example of a ring-fortress, (Plan 9) and
it has probably no Norman (and certainly no Roman) work in
it, while at Maiden Castle in Dorchester (Plan 8) there
is in one part no less than 8 lines of defense, one within
the other. The gates of earth-camps are often fortified
with almost trivial elaboration, as at Dumpton: (Plan 9)
and in a great camp in Devon,at Hembury near Honiton, (Plan 10)
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