Links.

http://www.mybrightonandhove.org.uk/hollingbury_hillfort_personal2.htm. For personal accounts of the Hillfort by Brighton residents..

http://www.brightonarch.org.uk/ Where to begin if you want to become involved with Archaeology in Brighton and Hove.

http://www.dewponds.com/bton_hollingbury.htm didn't know there was a dewpond on the hill despite stumbling all over it for 15 years. But apparently there is and its worth a look.

http://www.brighton-hove.gov.uk/site01.cfm?request=c1001052 for Brighton and Hove City Council's Management Plan

http://www.bhasvic.ac.uk/panels/hallpan/pan9.htm This is one of a series of painted panels from the Hall of Brighton and Hove Sixth Form College. Its supposed to show excavations at Hollingbury and does indeed accurately depict the vista from the southern flank of the hill, just outside the fort. However, none of the figures have yet been identified and no human remains were excavated from the site in the 1920's. It's generally considered a product of the artists imagination, but I don't know....theres just something about it which strikes me as authentic....but there again....

http://www.butser.org.uk/ Reconstructed Iron Age farmstead on the South Downs in Hampshire.

http://castellhenllys.pembrokeshirecoast.org.uk/ Reconstructed Iron Age Hillfort in West Wales, worth a visit. The page is also in Welsh for added Celtic authenticity.

http://www.seedybusiness.org/page0.shtml Account of the local history of the allotments and Moulscombe Forest Garden and Wildlife Project.