2016
DOI: 10.1017/ppr.2016.9
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‘Held in Place’: Round Barrows in the Later Bronze Age of Lowland Britain

Abstract: This paper presents a systematic study of later Bronze Age practices at round barrows – features that are typically seen as emblematic of the Early Bronze Age in Britain. Examining the evidence from 87 excavated round barrows in the east of England, it adds subtlety and empirical detail to previous discussions about the changing role of funerary monuments over the course of the 2nd millennium bc. A wide variety of activities was undertaken at existing round barrows in the later Bronze Age. Burials were added, … Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Moreover, there is a pronounced local particularity in relation to the landscapes that the land tenure boundaries divided. They emerged from landscapes that had already been altered by previous generations and were partly determined by existing earthworks, such as barrows and hillock burials (Bradley 2002: 76; Cooper 2016: 295, 303‐5; Løvschal 2014 a : 731, 736), and natural features, such as river systems, which operated as broad‐scale landscape divisions prior to the mid‐second millennium BC (Bradley 2019; Johnston 2005).…”
Section: Logic #2: Land Tenure Boundaries Make Landscapes Look Similarmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, there is a pronounced local particularity in relation to the landscapes that the land tenure boundaries divided. They emerged from landscapes that had already been altered by previous generations and were partly determined by existing earthworks, such as barrows and hillock burials (Bradley 2002: 76; Cooper 2016: 295, 303‐5; Løvschal 2014 a : 731, 736), and natural features, such as river systems, which operated as broad‐scale landscape divisions prior to the mid‐second millennium BC (Bradley 2019; Johnston 2005).…”
Section: Logic #2: Land Tenure Boundaries Make Landscapes Look Similarmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the macro-scale, the potential for obtaining meaningful results is in no small part dependent on the preservation conditions for evidence of past agricultural practice, which could provide essential data on crops sown, fallow and crop-rotation cycles, manuring strategies, etc (Klamm 1993, 50, 80). Consequently, the fact that, at the aforementioned recently excavated Someren and Herkenbosch fields, no charred botanical macroremains were recovered 2016) hampers any supra-regional comparison of crops cultivated or fallow cycles. Moreover, a more methodological study into the origins and compositions of the charred macro-botanical remains in Celtic field sediments (Arnoldussen & Smit 2017) suggests that such remains were most probably brought onto the fields as fortuitous elements of household waste (as, or in, manure) rather than reflect crops and weeds grown locally (Müller-Wille 1965, 93;Arnoldussen 2012, 43-6;Arnoldussen & Scheele 2014, 60-1).…”
Section: Palaeoeconomymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ritual is detectable in such forms of evidence as the deliberate deposition of artefacts, perhaps primarily metalwork in these periods, and of human remains. For later prehistory, there has been a long discussion on the impossibility and inadvisability of separating ritual and pragmatic elements of life (Brück ; Fontijn ; Bradley ; Cooper ). Practices of deliberate deposition carried on into the Roman (Derks ; Fulford ) and early medieval periods (Hamerow ; Sofield ) as a complement to the emergence of more formalized religion, although there is more scepticism regarding the interpretation of (especially metalwork) hoards as ritual depositions in these periods.…”
Section: A Holistic Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The relationship between middle–late Bronze Age field systems and earlier Bronze Age barrows and cairns has been investigated (Cooper ). It is clear that areas where later Bronze Age or ‘prehistoric’ field systems occur correlate broadly with areas of surviving funerary monuments (compare Figs.…”
Section: The First Fields: Claiming the Land Through The Ancestors?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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