Gloucestershire is one of Britain’s richest counties in terms of its archaeological heritage. 
    Scattered across the high blue hills of the Cotswolds, 
    along the valleys of thee Severn, Avon and Wye, 
    and through the Forest of Dean 
    is a wealth of sites and monuments that allows us to understand 
    the many prehistoric communities who once lived, worked and died there. 
    From the camps and caves occupied by hunter-gatherer groups visiting 
    the area during the last Ice Age, 
    through the long barrows and camps of the first farmers, 
    to the massive hillforts and enclosures built by Celtic chieftains 
    in the centuries before the Roman Conquest, 
    this book charts the story of the landscape and its inhabitants 
    over a period spanning more than half a million years. 
    Drawing on the results of excavations at familiar landmarks 
    such as King Arthur’s Cave, Belas Knap, Hetty Pegler’s Tump 
    and Uley Bury, the story is enriched by the many new and remarkable discoveries 
    made in recent decades during quarrying and the construction of new roads, houses and factories. 
                
  
    Originally published in 1987, 
    this fully updated and expanded second edition will be of interest to 
    local residents, visitors, and those with an interest and love of the county.