Monument record MDO2888 - Conquer Barrow, West Stafford

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Summary

A bowl barrow constructed over the enclosure bank of the Mount Pleasant henge on its western side, probably Bronze Age in date. Visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs.

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

(SY 70798990) Conquer Barrow (NR) (1) Conquer Barrow is about 90ft in diameter and lies on the west bank of the enclosure (SY 78 NW 4) at the highest point of the hill. It has a flat top 24ft across and on the east is 7ft high above a shelf 24ft wide, possibly representing part of the original top of the bank from which there is another drop to a 'berm' immediately above the inner ditch. On the west the mound falls 15ft without a break to a very distrubed sloping shelf up to 30ft wide. A bank 2ft high and 10ft across runs up to the outer edge of this from the south. This shelf could be due to interference, perhaps deliberate remodelling connected with the name 'Mount Pleasant'. Conquer Barrow is probably a Bronze Age round barrow since its situation on the bank of a Neolithic earthwork has parallels (e.g. Robin Hood's Ball, Shrewton, Wilts). It is shown without the 'henge' on I Taylor's one inch map of Dorset (1765). (2,3) Conquer Barrow (NR) (4) SY 70788990. Conquer Barrow (name in local use) is generally as described by RCHM (2); it is thickly overgrown with trees and bushes. (See ground photograph). Published survey (1:2500) revised. (5) In 1971, a series of trenches were excavated across the terminal end of a ditch located at the west entrance of the enclosure in 1970. The ditch, which terminated 20.0m south-west of the main enclosure ditch, was that of the Conquer Barrow. On the south and south-east of the barrow, the ditch was flat bottomed, 7.0 - 8.20m wide and 2.70m deep with steep vertical walls. It was broken by a causeway, 6.20m wide, continuing into the gardens on the west. On the north, the ditch is not so clear and appears to run out of the field to the west under the modern hedgerow. An antler pick from the ditch in Cutting XLVI (see illustration), produced a C14 date of 2127 + or - 52 BC, and must be from an earlier context, probably a pre-enclosure settlement. A total of 306 flint artefacts were found. Cutting XLVI produced a Beaker and a Bronze Age sherd. Animal bone fragments were found in the plough soil. (6) Wainwright's proposed sequence of construction has been questioned. The rejected radiocarbon date is indistinguishable from those obtained from primary contexts at the henge's northern entrance. The principal reason for rejection seems to have been a belief that the barrow must post-date the henge earthworks, which at the point where they meet Conquer Barrow are much later in date, representing an extension of the henge bank and ditch across much of the original western entrance several centuries after the henge was initially constructed. However, as Sparey-Green argued, there is good reason on the basis of the excavated evidence to place the digging of the Conquer Barrow ditch either before the henge was constructed, or broadly contemporary with it. Re-assessment in the wake of AP analysis of the henge has further complicated the situation, but there is no reason to regard Conquer Barrow as a single phase monument. The suggestion that the Conquer Barrow ditch came first seems highly plausible, but need not rule out the suggestion that the barrow mound sits on the henge bank, as this may reflect a later enhancement of the mound. However, the suggestion that the mound sits on top of the bank, rather than an existing mound being incorporated in the bank, has yet to be supported by excavation - it has simply been assumed. (7, 8) Site of a large round bowl barrow, approximately 30m in diameter, constructed over the enclosure bank of the Mount Pleasant henge (MDO2890) on its western side, probably Bronze Age in date. Visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs.{10-11} Placed on the denuded rampart of a probable henge monument with entrance at South East, the chalk rubble from the ditch terminals of which may have been added to its fabric, enclosed on North and East by causewayed ditch (Grinsell). Possible barrow on the edge of a henge monument. {3}

Sources/Archives (11)

  • <1> Map: Ordnance Survey. Ordnance Survey Map 6in. 6 inch to 1 mile. 1963.
  • <2> Monograph: Royal Commission on Historical Monuments (England). 1970. An Inventory of Historical Monuments in the County of Dorset, Volume II (South East) Part 3. 451, 504.
  • <3> Monograph: Grinsell, L V. 1959. Dorset Barrows. 105.
  • <4> Map: Ordnance Survey. Ordnance Survey 25-inch map. 1976.
  • <5> Unpublished document: Barton, J G. Various. Field Investigators Comments JGB. F1 JGB 21-NOV-79.
  • <6> Monograph: Wainwright, G J. 1979. Mount Pleasant. Dorset: Excavations 1970-1971.
  • <7> Article in serial: Sparey-Green, C. 1994. Observations on the site of the ‘Two Barrows’, Fordington Farm, Dorchester; with a note on the ‘Conquer Barrow’. 116. 45-54.
  • <8> Monograph: Barber, Martyn. 2014. Mount Pleasant, Dorset. A Survey of the Neolithic 'Henge Enclosure' and Associated Features.
  • <9> Aerial Photograph: Royal Air Force. 17-APR-1947. RAF/CPE/UK/2018 4012-14.
  • <10> Aerial Photograph: Royal Air Force. 11-MAR-1948. RAF/CPE/UK/2491 3005-7.
  • <11> Digital archive: National Record of the Historic Environment.

Finds (0)

Related Monuments/Buildings (0)

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Location

Grid reference Centred SY 7079 8990 (41m by 41m) (3 map features)
Map sheet SY78NW
Civil Parish West Stafford; Dorset
Unitary Authority Dorset

Protected Status/Designation

Other Statuses/References

  • Legacy UID: Dorset Sites and Monuments Record: 1 125 022
  • Legacy UID: National Monuments Record: SY 78 NW 3
  • Legacy UID: National Record of the Historic Environment: 453934
  • Royal Commission Inventory Reference: West Stafford 22

Record last edited

Dec 2 2023 2:11AM

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