- Butser Ancient Farm
Butser Ancient Farm, near Petersfield in
Hampshire ,England , is a working replica of anIron Age farmstead where long-term experiments in prehistoric and Romanagriculture ,animal husbandry andmanufacturing are held to test ideas posited byarchaeologist s. The period of interest is that from 400 BC to 400 AD.Butser Ancient Farm was founded in 1972 by experimental archaeologist
Peter J Reynolds (6 November1939 -26 September 2001 ), and named after its original site at Butser Hill, a few kilometres from Petersfield. In 1976 a second site was opened atHillhampton Down about a kilometre away, and in 1989 the original site at Butser Hill was closed down. In 1991 the project moved to Bascomb Copse atChalton, Hampshire , about 5 km from the original site.Buildings at the farm include simulated pre-Roman roundhouses and a simulated
Roman villa . The Pimperne House was the first full-sized roundhouse to be built at the site, and at the time the largest in western Europe.An episode of the 2005
BBC Television documentary series "What the Ancients Did for Us " examining the ideas and inventions of theAncient Britons was filmed here.The farm is open to the public.
External links
* [http://www.butserancientfarm.co.uk/ Butser Ancient Farm]
* [http://www.gallica.co.uk/butser/ Images of the farm]References
* Citation | last = Aston | first = Mick | author-link = Mick_Aston
title = Peter Reynolds: Archaeologist who showed us what the Iron Age was really like (obituary)
newspaper =The Guardian | year = 2001 | date =2001-10-05
url = http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/humanities/story/0,,563844,00.html
* cite book | last = Reynolds | first = Peter J.
title = Butser Ancient Farm: Impressions
publisher = Archaeological Research
date = 1980 | location = Petersfield, Hampshire, England (This book contains many interesting monochrome photographs of the farm.)
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