Caesar's Camp is an Iron Age hill fort straddling the border of the counties of Surrey and Hampshire in southern England.
[2] It lies approximately 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) north of the town of Farnham, and a similar distance west of Aldershot.
[4] Caesar's Camp is a multivallate hillfort, a fort with multiple defensive rings, occupying an irregular promontory, with an entrance on the south side.
[2] Caesar's Camp stands 177 metres (581 ft) above mean sea level, and the Bagshot Beds of sand surface on the northern slopes of the hill.
[2] The medieval park pale is evident as a bank and accompanying ditch running along the western edge of Caesar's Camp.
However, this feature may instead be the misinterpreted remains of the medieval park pale, the spoil of which was thrown over the Iron Age defences.
[8] On a clear day, major London landmarks can be seen from its top including the Shard, Canary Wharf and the Wembley Arch.
[9] Miscellaneous finds at Caesar's Camp include a Roman roof tile, which is now held in Camberley Museum,[1] and an early rapier dating to the Middle Bronze Age (c. 1500–1000 BC).
[10] The sword has been assigned to the Thetford Class of Trump's Group II,[11] characterised by a trapezoid butt with two notches, and dated to 1200–1000 BC.