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vitrified fort การใช้

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  • Furthermore this site is an example of a vitrified fort
  • Vitrified forts such as Castle Hill are rarely found in England, and are more usual in Scotland.
  • The excavations also found vitrified rock, possibly indicating the island was once occupied by a vitrified fort.
  • Typically, they only survive as earthworks today, although remains of vitrified forts are found throughout Scotland.
  • Other similarly-sized vitrified forts within the area include Dun Evan, Dun Finlay and Dun Davie.
  • Vitrified forts are the remains of duns that have been set on fire and where stones have been partly melted.
  • An area known as Kemp Law is associated with the site of a vitrified fort and the Badger Brae that lies nearby.
  • Approximately to the north of Monifieth lies Laws hill, on which lies the Iron age ruins of a broch and vitrified fort.
  • There are also large numbers of vitrified forts, which have been subjected to fire, many of which may date to this period.
  • A vitrified fort crowns the hill of Knockfarrel in the parish of Fodderty, and there is a circular dun near the village of Lochcarron.
  • The oldest " structure " in the area is the remains of a vitrified fort on the top of Wester Craiglockhart Hill, which is of prehistoric origin.
  • There were also ruins of ancient churches at Straid and Templemoile, and the parish had a vitrified fort, on which by tradition fires were lit at Midsummer.
  • Oddly only the smallest of these tiny islets, Eilean Buidhe, shows any sign of ever having been permanently inhabited having the remains of a vitrified fort on it.
  • "' Dunagoil "'is a vitrified fort or dun on the Isle of Bute  an iron age hill fort whose ramparts have been melted by intense heat.
  • The northern ridge is four kilometres long and has the vitrified fort of D鵱 Deardail ( " Fort of the Red Eye " ) near its terminus just before it joins Glen Nevis.
  • The fort is probably named after Deirdre, the princess of Ulster, it is one in a line of vitrified forts that stretches from Craig Ph郿raig outside Inverness to the west coast.
  • There are also numerous vitrified forts, the walls of which have been subjected to fire, which may date to this period, but an accurate chronology has proven to be evasive.
  • On the top of Knockfarrel ( Gaelic : Cnoc Fhearghalaigh ), a hill about three miles ( 5 km ) to the west, stands a large and very complete vitrified fort with ramparts.
  • Mote Hill is also the site of vitrified fort, destroyed by fire in the first half of the first millennium AD . This date was confirmed by excavation by Murray Cook Stirling Council's Archaeologist.
  • Jamieson proposed that this tradition may be the earliest one to attempt to explain its construction, and that the " hard mortar " supposedly used by Paul, was an attempt to explain a vitrified fort.
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