BARROW, in Archaeology

in archaeology, a burial mound. Earth and stone or timber are the usual construction materials; in parts of SE Asia stone and brick have entirely replaced earth. A barrow built primarily of stone is often called a cairn. Barrows occur in many parts of the world; they were built during the Neolithic period in Western Europe and in recent times in Buddhist countries. In European prehistory the characteristic barrows are either long or round. The long ones are from the Neolithic period and often contain several burial chambers. They may have been intended to simulate cave burials. The stone chambers were placed at one end of the mound and were approached by a passage, sometimes over 300 ft (90 m) in length. Round barrows, usually dating from the Bronze Age, normally contain a single burial. The round barrow was commonly bell shaped; another type had a low central mound that invariably contained cremated remains and was surrounded by a walled ditch or a circle of standing stones, usually about 150 ft (50 m) in diameter. Barrow building in Europe continued until the Christian era. Roman, Saxon, and Viking barrows are known, though such burials were apparently reserved for important personages. The erection of mounds over burials has been widespread (see tomb). The round barrow or stupa of Asia is usually a shrine for relics of the Buddha. See megalithic monuments and Mound Builders.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Barrow in Archaeology
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books on: Barrow in Archaeology  - 1373 results

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...Science-Theory Gap in a Rural Rajasthani...Theoretical Archaeology Group Conference...Bronze Age Barrow at Liskey...119881 A Barrow Cemetery...Cornish Archaeology 27:27-169...the Senses in History and...Land, 1981. In Archaeology With Ethnography...a Linear Barrow Cemetery...
...wrote: The ground to the west of Wor Barrow was examined to ascertain if any trace...Thus the great pioneer of scientific archaeology first described the use of a geophysical method of archaeological detection, in Volume IV of his Excavations in Cranborne...
...in prehistory: the evidence for Celtic spirit , in I. Hodder (ed.) The Archaeology of Contextual meanings , Cambridge: Cambridge...1985) The Origin and Function of the Earthen Long Barrows of Northern Europe , Oxford: British Archaeological...
...example, have 1600 points and the round barrow 410. (From Fletcher and Spicer 1988, courtesy...according to the detail required by the archaeology. If an area is flat and featureless very...of archaeology that will not be covered in this book, although computerisation in...
...development of urban archaeology 7...Mesolithic sites mentioned in text 35...in the Radley oval barrow, Oxfordshire...is Director of the Archaeology Data Service. He...Anglo-Scandinavian settlements in the Yorkshire Wolds...working on a Viking barrow cemetery in Derbyshire...
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journal articles on: Barrow in Archaeology  - 23 results

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...natural places in the Neolithic of...England. World Archaeology 30, 13-22...Environmental change in Cornwall during...years. Cornish Archaeology 19, 3-16. Clark...The Neolithic in Cornwall. Cornish Archaeology 25, 35-80...
...Wordsworth and Lyrical Archaeology: The Poetics of...Prehistorical Imagination in "The Brothers...unmarked graves or "barrows" found near pre-Roman...pre-history. In England, archaeology, the reconstructive...methods of modern archaeology, antiquarians in general relied...
...technological change in western Europe. World Archaeology 20, 249-60. ----- 1990. The passage...Burgess, C.B. 1968. The later Bronze Age in the British Isles and north-western France...Lockington gold hoard: an Early Bronze Age barrow cemetery at Lockington, Leicestershire...
...librarian of the Free Public Library in Barrow-in-Furness, in 1886. Fronde had...Librarian, Free Public Library Museum, Barrow-in-Furness to Piazzi Smyth, Edinburgh...Drower, Flinders Petrie: A Life" in Archaeology (London, 1985), 27-31. (131.) It...
...Heroes: Studies in Medieval Culture in Honour of Charles W. Jones, ed Margot...11) So Rosemary Cramp, Beowulf and archaeology, Medieval Archeology, NS 1 (1957...stated that it was actually only in the barrow for 300 years or a little over. There...
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magazine articles on: Barrow in Archaeology  - 11 results

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...that resulted captures the moment in the history of archaeology when the time barrier to a human antiquity of geological...so who is pointing to the flint and who is sitting in the wheel-barrow remains a bit of a mystery; the lack of side-whiskers...
...not normally associated with conventional archaeology. LAID TO REST The first clues are found in the burial mounds of Britain and Ireland...Silbury, are two elongated mounds, or long barrows, that would normally be interpreted as burial...
...recognised rhyolites and tuffs in the barrow, neither of which are local to Salisbury...are built, like all circles, of stones in the immediate locality, dolerite being...Aubrey Burl was Principal Lecturer in Archaeology at Hull College of Higher Education, and...
...antiquities department devoted to the archaeology and history of Britain a few years later...illustrations, which were influential in developing understanding of medieval architecture...features in the landscape. Two influential barrow diggers of the eighteenth century were...
...emporia (trade centres) are archaeologys special contribution to Dark...airports, these were non-places, in the sense that they were overlooked...chronicler was heresy. Yet, as the archaeology of the eighth and ninth centuries...the Baltic Sea was regularly in contact with the Abbasid caliphate...
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newspaper articles on: Barrow in Archaeology  - 13 results

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...circular enclosure was discovered with a barrow close by, likely to be a bronze age temple...and prehistoric farms have been found in considerable numbers across the southern...been a hugely successful year for aerial archaeology in Wales and we may not see another like...
...professor of ancient history and archaeology at George Washington University in Northwest and author of "From Eden...universal flood, says Lloyd Bailey, the Barrow professor of biblical studies at Mount Olive College in Mount Olive, N.C. He has a doctorate...
...University in Fresno who has been studying American Indian art for decades. "There is nothing that compares with it in North America - from Barrow, Alaska, to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec; from Portland, Maine, to Portland, Oregon." The somber rocks of Little...
...2005 he too died. Now they have been found again in an old film canister, labelled "Bush Barrow", by senior lecturer Niall Sharples. The reader in archaeology described them as "minute" saying: "The largest one is a millimetre long and about point...
...is easy to understand why Dean Wilton, a student from Barrow-in-Furness, said (with a sigh, not a shudder): You can...the various parts of England allotted to their care. Archaeology has answered some of the questions. The complication...
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encyclopedia articles on: Barrow in Archaeology  - 5 results

 
 
BARROW , in archaeology in archaeology, a burial mound. Earth...construction materials; in parts of SE Asia stone...entirely replaced earth. A barrow built primarily of stone...often called a cairn . Barrows occur in many parts of the world...
...classical archaeology, anthropological archaeology today is concerned with culture history...potassium-argon), are used to place events in time. Attempts at explaining evolutionary...such remains as the lake dwelling , barrow , and kitchen midden . At first the...
TUMULUS too my l s, plural tumuli li, in archaeology, a heap of earth or stones placed over a grave. The terms mound , barrow , or cairn are more common in modern usage. ____________________ Copyright...
...lith ik Gr.,=large stone, in archaeology, a construction involving one...antiquity. These monuments are found in various parts of the world...with earth mounds, forming a barrow . Menhirs sometimes stood alone...mound. Sometimes they were set in long rows called alignments...
...Description of Roman Political Institutions (3d ed. 1911, repr. 1963); Jerome Carcopino, Daily Life in Ancient Rome (tr. 1940, repr. 1962); R. H. Barrow, The Romans (1949, repr. 1964); C. G. Starr, Civilization and the Caesars (1954, repr. 1965...


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