The Middle to Late Iron Age in England emerges across a tapestry of hillforts, coastal settlements and funerary landscapes between 715 BCE and 100 CE. Material culture — La Tène-style metalwork, oppida-like enclosures, and richly furnished burials — speaks of intensified regional hierarchy and increased long-distance contacts with continental Europe. Archaeological data indicates that many of the sampled contexts are associated with small burial mounds, roadside cemeteries and settlement phases on prominent hills: Winnall Down (Hampshire), Ham Hill (Somerset), and Dalton Parlours (West Yorkshire) among others.
Genomic data from 74 individuals sampled across ten sites support a picture of substantial continuity with earlier British populations, but also complexity introduced by mobility. The predominance of Y-haplogroup R (29/35 male-assigned Y cases) aligns with Western European R lineages known from the late Bronze and Iron Ages, suggesting persistence of paternal ancestries in many communities. At the same time, material signs of continental exchange and occasional eastern or southern mitochondrial lineages hint at mobility, marriage networks, and small-scale migration. Limited evidence suggests regional variation in uptake of La Tène styles and status displays; archaeological interpretation remains cautious where context is disturbed or sample sizes are small for any single site.
Key archaeological sites cited in these samples include Winnall Down (Hampshire), Worlebury (Somerset), Over (Cambridgeshire), Tregunnel (Newquay, Cornwall), Fairford Saxon Way (Gloucestershire), East Kent Access Road (Kent), Wattle Syke and Dalton Parlours (West Yorkshire), Thame (Oxfordshire), and Ham Hill (Somerset).