The site was excavated in the 1950s by Mr. G.P. Burstow and Mr. G.A. Holleyman at a cost of about £50 (equivalent to £331 in 2023) with equipment borrowed from Brighton College (Junior School).[3] It revealed an extensive late Iron Age and Romano-British settlement including housing structures, trackways, field boundaries as well as a temple or a shrine. A 76.2 metres (250 ft) deep well can be found in the adjacent field to the south.[4]
Iron Age Settlement
The late Iron Age settlement is located at the top of the hill and includes several hundred post holes marking probable locations of huts and corn drying racks. A storage pit can also be found. The settlement was partially enclosed by a palisade with a shallow ditch marking an eastern edge of the site, it survives as a buried feature. Finds from the site include fragment of a Bronze Age perforated macehead, Iron Age pottery as well as spindle whorls and loom weights.[2]
Roman temple
The Romano-British temple is located at the summit of the hill and can be seen as earthwork marked by a circular depression 11 metres (36 ft) in diameter. The shrine itself was constructed from wood rather than stone[5] and consisted of two structures, one square and the other trapezoidal, both marked by post-holes.[6] A copper alloy plaque of a boar from the site may have been associated with a Roman temple at Chanctonbury Ring.[7] It is now located at Worthing Museum and Art Gallery alongside other artefacts from the site, including a 2nd century enamelled fish brooch and a 3rd century musical instrument mouthpiece.[8]
Archeological finds
A number of archeological finds from the site are held at the Worthing Museum (both on display as well as in storage).[8] This list presents notable finds in alphabetical order.
A private burial ground of the Thynne family and the Muntham Court Estate is located within the tree clump at the highest point of the hill.[20] It is dating back to 1925 with a death of Edward Thynne. People who lived on the estate were buried at a “staff cemetery” alongside the family.[21]
Members of the Thynne Family buried here include:
Edward Thynne
Tom Thynne
Alice Rachel (the daughter of Lord Henry)
Colonel Thynne and his wife Marjory
Edwards’s parents and his brother Tom have been exhumed from Findon church by Colonel Thynne and re-buried here. A headstone for Edwards’s grave was designed by Sir Edward Lutyens (who designed many other memorials, including The Cenotaph) and the same design was used for Tom’s grave. A stone cross from the original grave can now be seen among the trees in the middle of the clump. Edwards’s parents were re-buried with their original headstone.[21]
According to a rumour in Findon at a time, Edward’s death was a suicide and he could not therefore be buried on consecrated ground. The Coroner’s inquest found that it was in fact a tragic accident involving accidental discharge of a pistol.[22] Edwards grave and later the rest of the cemetery have been consecrated.[21]
An obelisk likely erected by William Frankland has been moved around the Muntham Court Estate over the years. It can be seen on 1837 map standing close to the current site of the burial ground.[23]
^ abcStanley, Donald (1992). "APPENDIX FOUR The Private Burial Ground". Muntham Court Estate and Worthing Crematorium. D. Stanley. p. 57. ISBN0952030101.
^Stanley, Donald (1992). "FOREWORD by Group Captain Thynne, CBE, AFC". Muntham Court Estate and Worthing Crematorium. D. Stanley. pp. 4–5. ISBN0952030101.
^Stanley, Donald (1992). "APPENDIX SIX The Noble Obelisk The Windmill Well House and Sawmill". Muntham Court Estate and Worthing Crematorium. D. Stanley. p. 63. ISBN0952030101.