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Tribe of the Durotriges
Beyond the pervasive Catuvellaunian influence during the first century BC
were the Duroriges of Dorset. They had no recognisable centre, unless the
mint at Hengistbury Head is an indication, but display a quite unusual
density of powerful hill forts which were to be the scene of a stubborn
resistance to the Romans. Maiden Castle is a finely preserved example of one
of these hill forts.
The impression is of a number of fiercely independent groups or baronies
rather than a closely unified state. The territory extended into south
Wiltshire and south Somerset, where they met the
Dobunni, and on the west
they were bordered by the
Dumnonii along a line probably represented by the River Exe.
(Additional information taken from The Oxford History of England: Roman
Britain, Peter Salway.)
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