452 APPENDIX ON THE TOPOGRAPHY OF SIGWELL. 



district at a very remote period, may be regarded as being of some 

 interest to anthropologists. That Cadbury was occupied at a later 

 date than that of which I have been speaking, appears certain from 

 the discovery of horse-shoes and other objects of iron within the 

 camp ; but if the evidence afforded by Sigwell camp and the adjoin- 

 ing tumuli is to be relied upon — and I see no reason why it should 

 not be accepted, at least provisionally — the first erection of the 

 fortress and its connection with the neighbouring outposts should 

 date from a period not later than the Bronze Age. 



